The God Wave. By Patrick
Hemstreet. Harper Voyager. $15.99.
Originally published last
year and now available in a new paperback edition, Patrick Hemstreet’s debut
novel, The God Wave, still seems both
as prescient and as in-the-moment as when it first appeared. The first book of
a trilogy – the second, The God Peak,
is expected later this year – The God
Wave remains chillingly realistic. The title does not refer, except perhaps
obliquely, to the Higgs boson, known as “the god particle,” but instead is a
reference to a biological rather than physical phenomenon. This is a brain
wave, so far undiscovered, that operates above the measurable frequencies of
alpha, beta and gamma waves and that can lead to manifestation of superhuman
abilities (which Hemstreet says are really human
abilities) in the 90% of the brain that generally goes unused (that 90%-of-the-brain-is-unused
notion is a fiction, but one of such long standing that Hemstreet’s employment
of it is not too big a strain on one’s credulity). The idea of discovering
something new in the human body is scarcely far-fetched – consider, for
example, the very recent discovery that the body contains a previously unknown
organ called the mesentery. Yes, the presence of tissue connecting the abdomen
to the intestines has been known for some time, but the realization that the
tissue is a single organ rather than a series of similarly functioning but
discrete clumps is a new one, requiring scientists and physicians to look at
this part of the body in a new way.
Something along those lines is
what happens in The God Wave,
although matters are understandably ratcheted up quite a bit for the sake of
drama. The primary characters here are well-meaning, if flawed, scientists; and
yes, they are types to some extent, but Hemstreet does a good job of humanizing
them. One is idealistic Chuck Brenton, a neuroscience
researcher at Johns Hopkins who is looking for real-world applications of brain
waves. After all, if they can move the needle during an electroencephalogram,
why not use them to drive cars or paint pictures? Back here in the real world,
there are already experimental systems that let quadriplegics and other
severely physically limited people use their brains for certain types of
functionality. Hemstreet’s creation of a desire by Brenton to go just a bit
beyond that readily passes the believability test. The problem for Brenton is
that math is not his expertise, and he needs help using very complex aspects of
it to turn brain waves into commands and actions.
That is
where MIT professor Matt Streegman comes in. A borderline misanthrope and a
genius in his own field, Streegman hears an interview with Benton and thinks
immediately of how Brenton’s research, if pushed just a bit further, could
benefit Streegman’s wife, Lucy. She is hospitalized and comatose, but has
active brain waves. Perhaps Brenton’s findings – aided by Streegman’s math
expertise – could let Streegman communicate with Lucy. Besides – and, yes, this
coincidence does strain credulity a bit – it just so happens that Streegman
works not only in higher mathematics but also in robotics.
Anyone
who remembers Edgar Allan Poe’s deeply chilling “The Facts in the Case of M.
Valdemar” will see just how wrong things could go in this scenario, although
that is not quite the way they actually do go wrong. (In fact, Lucy more or
less disappears from the story after being used to set up Streegman’s
background. A little more attention to her would better have humanized her
husband.)
It is
the partnership of Brenton and Streegman that gets the book going; and if the
scene-setting is a touch on the slow side, it helps to remember that this is,
after all, the start of a three-book series. The two men form Advanced
Kinetics, gather the usual variegated mixture of subjects – gamer, artist,
martial-arts specialist, construction worker – and engage in intense research.
And fault lines between the researchers develop soon enough. Brenton’s goal is
to aid the handicapped and make sea and space exploration easier and safer.
Streegman, far less altruistic and more focused on a big financial payoff, is
quite willing to get military rather than medical backing for their lab, and
his stronger personality soon leads to the involvement of one General Howard,
who really is a cardboard character: he gets the lab working on complex
research, for military purposes, with the super-secret Deep Shield, and Brenton
does not realize what is happening until there is no turning back. But the test
subjects themselves (Lanfen, Mike, Mini, Sara and Tim) know that military
control of their growing abilities can lead to disaster, and those newly
developed capabilities give them powers of which even Brenton and Streegman are
unaware. No, this is no Frankenstein
or R.U.R., but Hemstreet calls up
elements of those tales as the plot of The
God Wave enmeshes the characters more and more tightly. The book fits
firmly in the SF/action genre while raising the sorts of questions that only
the greats in that field raise consistently: philosophical queries about
individuality, creativity, and what it means to be fully human. Hemstreet also
manages to employ some sly humor from time to time, with references to films
ranging from The Matrix to Independence Day to Transformers. The result is a provocative novel that is not only
fast-paced and fun to read but also unusually thoughtful and involving. And its
cliffhanger ending is quite well done and flows naturally from what has gone before,
rather than having the tacked-on quality so common in “stay tuned” conclusions.
It will be most interesting to see where Hemstreet goes with his premises and
characters as this trilogy continues.
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