
Dropping this into the nice try pile and moving to my next book. I just can't find the energy to keep reading. The book moves so slow, that it takes 46 pages to get the first chapter complete and frankly, not much happens until the last four pages. A shame, the writing isn't bad, but the story line just isn't catching. Maybe it doesn't set because I'm not nearing that age range or something.ĭefinitely leaning toward a dud book on this one. It covers someone in their 90s realizing they're old. It is a story about later parts of life and how things happen. And the dog disappears after a couple pages.

I'm not 100% sure how I feel about this book. The whole story seems to be linked to an older brain, older generation. unique but being made to feel outdated, even by the story's standards. Struggling to find a character I can connect with. Poginant, lyrical, humorous, and often shocking, Holy Fire offers a hard unsparing look into a world that could become our own.


In Holy Fire, Bruce Sterling once again creates a unique and provocative future that deals with such timeless topics of the human condition as love, memory, science, politics, and the meaning of death. Worst of all, Mia will have to undergo one last radical procedure that could cost her a second life. She joins a group of outlaw anarchists whose leader may be the man of her dreams.or her undoing. Hitching a ride on a plane to Europe, Mia sets out on a wild intercontinental quest in search of spiritual gratification, erotic revelation, and the thing she missed most of all: the holy fire of the creative experience. But first she will have to escape her team of medical keepers. The procedure is not without risk and her second chance at life will not come without a price. But first she must submit herself to a radical-and painful-experimental procedure which promises to make her young again. She has lived her life with such caution that it has been totally bereft of pleasure and adventure. But a deathbed visit with a long-ago ex-lover and a chance meeting with a young bohemian dress-designer brings Mia to an awful revelation. Mia Ziemann is a 94-year-old medical economist who enjoys all the benefits of her position. Meanwhile, the young live on the fringes of society, ekeing out a meagre survival on free, government-issued rations and a black market in stolen technological gadgetry from an earlier, less sophisticated age. Power is in the hands of conservative senior citizens who have watched their health and capital investments with equal care, gaining access to the latest advancements in life-extension technology. It is a world of synthetic memory drugs, benevolent government surveillance, underground anarchists, and talking canine companions.

The 21st century is coming to a close, and the medical industrial complex dominates the world economy.
