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THE GRIEF MASTERS by D. L. Farrar

THE GRIEF MASTERS

by D. L. Farrar

Pub Date: June 6th, 2014
ISBN: 978-1458214447
Publisher: AbbottPress

In a corporate-controlled future from which religion has been purged, inventor Troy Vincent is condemned to a virtual-reality punishment (and likely execution) over accusations that he murdered a business rival.

Farrar’s debut novel kicks off his Christian-oriented sci-fi series taking place in a 22nd-century world where, governments and political parties having failed, giant corporations control (i.e., “sponsor”) a society battered by global warming and unrest. As a result, religion has largely been suppressed—its existence is bad for business, evidently; this is not a sentiment one expects in the American evangelical realm—and criminal justice is downsized to a kind of twist on the medieval notion of trial by ordeal. The accused are placed into virtual-reality pods, where they are assailed by “demons” of their own making—bad conscience for the guilty, regret for the innocent. Demons create manifestations that effectively kill their humans, both in cyberspace and reality. Inventor Troy Vincent is condemned to a Virtual Reality Chamber on trumped-up charges he murdered Hoy SamWong, a ruthless tycoon who caused Troy’s father’s death and stole Troy’s company and his wife. Paradoxically, the beautiful Lovena Baptista, daughter of another of Hoy SamWong’s ex-partners, is also being tormented in a VRC for the identical crime. The duo’s potential savior (besides, of course, the Savior) is Vincent—a shape-shifting android devised by Troy’s father with Vincent family DNA—who is kept around by the heartless corporations as a sort of attending executioner (for some reason, the bad guys don’t anticipate this becoming a problem). Spock-like Vincent, with a crusader’s cross emblazoned on his breastplate, is a most intriguing blend of old and new. Less successful are the title entities, Grief Masters, helpful VR visitors who bear names such as Courage and Faith and appear to the embattled Troy and Lovena during their cliffhanger perils in fantasy digital environments. Are they angels? Saints? Their literalist intercessions take the narrative from cyberpunk to The Shack, although Farrar maintains a brisk and fairly exciting (holy) roller-coaster momentum throughout.

Christian cyberpunk sci-fi—quite a start.