WIJFR: Eastern Standard Tribe

closeHey, just so you know ... this post is now about 14 years and 9 months old. Please keep that in mind as it very well may contain broken links and/or outdated information.

Cory Doctorow’s Eastern Standard Tribe is a soothsaying jaunt into the not-so-distant future, where 24/7 communication and chatroom alliances have evolved into tribal networks that secretly work against each other in shadowy online realms. The novel opens with its protagonist, the peevish Art Berry, on the roof of an asylum. He wonders if it’s better to be smart or happy. His crucible is a pencil up the nose for a possible “homebrew lobotomy.” To explain Art’s predicament, Doctorow flashes backward and slowly fills in the blanks.

My latest e-book read was Cory Doctorow’s “Eastern Standard Tribe” (actually I finished his group of short stories, “A Place So Foreign and Eight More” a while back but I guess I forgot to post about it, oh well!).

“Eastern Standard Tribe” tells the story of Art, a UE (user experience) consultant and member of the EST tribe (meaning his loyalties are to those people living in the eastern standard time zone and he tries he schedules his life accordingly). One part of the story takes place in the “present” and is told in the first-person: this is Art currently in the mental institution. The other part of the story takes place in the “past” and is told in the third-person: this is Art and the series of events that culminate in his being placed into the asylum.

In this semi-futuristic world, some people are double agents pretending to be a member of a different tribe (say, GMT or PST) so they can slowly undermine the competiting tribe from the inside. In Art’s particular case, he is working for a client in London (GMT) and his proposal is not so off-target that the client won’t accept it, but off enough so that overall the project will fail and he can sell the better version to a different client back in his own EST tribe (trust me, Doctorow does a better job of laying this out than I do).

Each chapter alternates back and forth between the present Art in the nuthouse and the actions in the past that Art was involved in with his partner and girlfriend. Both storylines intertwine as we slowly put together the whole picture of Art’s fate. It was a good read.

Next up on my e-book list: Doctorow’s “Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *