WWW:Wake

The last time I did a book review was in high school, and if I’m not mistaken, it was likely for THE CHRYSALIDS; which was a brilliant science fiction novel by the way!

With that said, I am going to try to do justice to the latest book I’ve read: Robert J. Sawyer’s WAKE – the first in his WWW trilogy.

Here is a blurb from Robert’s site about the book:

“Caitlin Decter is young, pretty, feisty, a genius at math — and blind. Still, she can surf the net with the best of them, following its complex paths clearly in her mind. When a Japanese researcher develops a new signal-processing implant that might give her sight, she jumps at the chance, flying to Tokyo for the operation.

But Caitlin’s brain long ago co-opted her primary visual cortex to help her navigate online. Once the implant is activated, instead of seeing reality, the landscape of the World Wide Web explodes into her consciousness, spreading out all around her in a riot of colors and shapes. While exploring this amazing realm, she discovers something — some other — lurking in the background. And it’s getting smarter …”

In addition to Caitlin’s story are a couple of seemingly unrelated events in other parts of the world. In China an outbreak of the bird flu (H5N1) is handled by the Chinese government by culling the humans that are infected as well as shutting the country off from the rest of the outside word by cutting its internet and phone connections to hide their transgression. Elsewhere, in a research facility, a Bonobo/Chimpanzee hybrid that can use ASL (American Sign Language), produces art that defies what they are “supposed” to be capable of. Youtube videos and political strife follow. Thirdly, a growing intelligence on the world wide web begins to take form. It strains to come to terms with itself and its surroundings, yet it begins to evolve. And, like Annie Sullivan, reaching down into the depths of Helen Keller’s mind, Caitlin makes a connection with this web-based entity and strives to teach it.

I consumed this book. Like with his Neanderthal Parallax novels, I completely empathize with these characters. They lift off the page and pull you along with them, particularly Caitlin. Her ability to “see” through people and her edgy humour are brilliantly achieved and you can’t help but admire her strength of character and resolve. The use of biological terms and technology are meshed throughout the story in a way that it isn’t dumped on you. (It should be noted that I have a biology and information technology background, so I felt like this book was written for me. But with that said, the way he reveals the information would easily engage anyone without this knowledge.)

There are wonderful parallels and references to Helen Keller and her rise to awareness from the dark place in which she once lived as well as timely topics and subject matter that is deftly interwoven in the story. He engages in real world debates (i.e. the intelligence of apes and their ability to use sign language, the cross-breeding of species, the potential self-awareness of the internet, etc.) and employs throughout some some witty references and poignant gibes. It is obvious that Mr. Sawyer took his time to research well before writing this and it is no wonder he was won such honours as the Hugo, the Nebula, and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award.

This is a fantastic beginning to a much anticipated series. It ends well, but leaves you hungering for more. I very much look forward to what will come in the next novel and how Mr. Sawyer is going to engage me further in the coming books, WATCH and WONDER. Whether you are a science fiction aficionado or not, add this book to your Must Read list. It will not disappoint.

Here is the book trailer.

My WordPress Plugins

I’ve spent a bit of time learning about WordPress (which powers this blog) and some of the plugins that are available for it. Depending on what your requirements are, there are a multitude of WP plugins that you can choose from. Here are some of mine:

  1. Align RSS Images – Makes image alignment work in RSS feeds
  2. All in One SEO Pack – Out-of-the-box SEO for your WordPress blog
  3. Broken Link Checker – Checks your posts for broken links and missing images and notifies you on the dashboard if any are found.
  4. Facebook Comments – Copies comments from your imported Facebook Notes back into your blog entries.
  5. Frame Free – Frame Free is a plugin to remove any frame created by Digg, Facebook, Google Images, Ow.ly and any other third party services.
  6. Google Analytics for WordPress – This plugin makes it simple to add Google Analytics with extra search engines and automatic clickout and download tracking to your WordPress blog.
  7. Google XML Sitemaps – This plugin will generate a sitemaps.org compatible sitemap of your WordPress blog which is supported by Ask.com, Google, MSN Search and YAHOO.
  8. LiveJournal Crossposter Remix – Automatically copies all posts to a LiveJournal or other LiveJournal-based blog. Editing or deleting a post will be replicated as well.
  9. Live Space Sync – A Live Spaces rpc plug-in.
  10. MaxBlogPress Favicon – Easily add favicon to your blog without editing any wordpress files.
  11. Post Notification – Sends an email to all subscribers. (this is how I cross-post to blogger)
  12. Search Unleashed – Advanced search engine that provides full text searching across posts, pages, comments, titles, and URLs.
  13. ShareThis – Let your visitors share a post/page with others.
  14. Socialite – Publishes your WordPress posts to Twitter, Facebook, and Myspace. (I use only for Myspace)
  15. Target Blank In Posts And Comments – Inserts target=”_blank” into post and comment content URLs and external links will open in new tabs.
  16. Twitme – This plugin allows you to automatically post your new posts on twitter.
  17. Wordbook – Cross-post your blog updates to your Facebook account.
  18. WordPress Database Backup – On-demand backup of your WordPress database.
  19. wp-cache – Very fast cache module
  20. WP-Cumulus – Flash based Tag Cloud for WordPress
  21. WP-SpamFree – An extremely powerful anti-spam plugin that virtually eliminates comment spam.
    That’s not all of them, of course. What ones do you use?

The Future of Fiction?

I’ve heard some talk of late about the future of fiction and gaming. I’m not surprised. Considering the numbers of young people that are into games and the increasing demand for ebooks, it seems only natural for these two mediums to merge. I look at the Nintendo DS that my boys carry around and I can totally see how they might be engaged by stories written for such a medium with the means to engage in games during the story as well as go online. Fiction may well become more interactive in the future and it is something I highly look forward to. Here are some interesting links that I’ve been reading on this.