Thursday, 4 June 2020

No Signal - Jem Tugwell

Proximity trod a balanced line between a futuristic, stylised dystopia and a starkly realist, only just, future in the UK. A society functioning on its embedded technology the novel focused on the implications of that technology on the police force as well as everyday lives. The main characters, Clive Lussac and Zoe Jordan presented as one of crime fiction’s unique and original duos, opposites in almost all respects apart from their desire for justice and truth. 

No Signal is the much anticipated follow up to Proximity and we are reacquainted with Clive and Zoe. Both a little older with some career progression for Zoe which means Clive has a new partner, Ava Miller, who he appears to mentor and nurture. But have no fear, Zoe is very much here! She’s just working for a different department. 

Proximity had me open mouthed at times as it was both a crime story and an exploration of how technology could potentially, not just dominate our lives, for it seems to do that now anyway, but control them with the opened ended consideration for the reader of whether that was a good or bad thing. With those protocols already set in place No Signal began with a now familiar landscape. 

I am treading carefully because I don’t want to give anything away for readers. No Signal takes another aspect of our digital lives, our leisure digital lives perhaps it would be clearer to say, and exploits that to an explosive and ultimate conclusion beyond what we could probably imagine! Let's just say it's a gamechanger. And it's about besting the system. But it's also within the context of the Proximity landscape and, as might be natural in the midst of a pandemic, lockdown situation my thoughts turned to tracking and tracing! 

It’s mesmerising as you follow the strands of this audacious venture that takes you the length and breadth of the United Kingdom. Of course it is a criminal venture and once more the balance between old and new policing methods is brought to the forefront as we accompany Clive, Ava and Zoe in a thrilling, white knuckle ride of a tale that will have you hanging on for dear life, and disbelief. If Proximity was a runaway train No Signal is the ultimate theme park white knuckle ride you'd queue hours for. 

The characterisations are sustained. Zoe, transferred to the Cyber Crime section, ever restless for action, again impresses as the perfect foil for Clive. She seems to know just how to cope with him. Clive is still grappling with his demons and with those younger than himself in positions of seniority. He is still squirming beneath the controlling system he is forced to conform to. There was a sense of ‘us ‘ and ‘them’ within the police and with the additional personnel who play the major roles in the events that thwart the intentions and determinations of Clive and his gang. Faintly topical? The story is mainly told from his perspective. The villains are subtly villainous and some are hidden among the cast of characters. Will you spot who they are, I wonder?

Whilst Proximity encourages us to consider the implications of our digital world and the pros and cons of a society under continual surveillance and control, No Signal leans more towards a gripping narrative and plot driven tale. No less enjoyable because all of those considerations from Proximity are in place as you read, punctuated, and embedded as it were, within the narrative of No Signal. It's a worthy sequel. I'm hoping that in true dystopian fiction fashion (now there's a tongue twister for you) there'll be a third story? Please?

iMe. iLike. ðŸ˜‰

I was delighted to receive an advance copy from Serpentine Books. 

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