Ice Vegas by Larry Niven; Steven BarnesMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
Honestly, this is a good book for nostalgia. For those of us who grew up on SF that was still filled with wonder and positive aspects and not just dire warnings. And it's doubly strange to be saying that when this particular novel follows a master assassin who lives in this wonderful time working for ambiguous (or very much not-ambiguous) political finks.
But that's kinda the thing. This novel is working from the angle of redemption. It has a very Koontz feel in some ways, but it's mixed gloriously with all the big SF concepts (near-future, free-energy, built-up Greenland as a free-zone Vegas wonderland).
The core plot is comfortable, but there are some genuine moments of real awesomeness and surprise in the side encounters.
That's the thing about SF. It's horrors can be truly horrible, but so can its wonder be wonderful. It's the wonder that makes me label this as nostalgic. Niven and Barnes, while working together over all these many novels, work that magic well.
I think this is very solid. Not brilliant. That would require a different kind of plot and MC. But as a redemption-type novel? Very satisfying.
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