A Quantum Murder (Greg Mandel)

by Peter F. Hamilton

Hardcover, 1997

Status

Available

Call number

823.914

Publication

Tor Books (1997), Edition: 1st Tor ed, Hardcover, 352 pages

Description

"Professor Edward Kitchener, a double Nobel laureate researching quantum cosmology for the powerful Event Horizon conglomerate has been savagely murdered. But was he the victim of industrial espionage, personal revenge, or a crime of passion by one of his handpicked team of live-wire students?" "Event Horizon needs to know and fast, so Greg Mandel, PSI-boosted veteran of the infamous Mindstar Battalion, must embark on an urgent investigation that ultimately leads him to an astounding confrontation with a past, which, according to the dead man's theories, might never have happened."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

User reviews

LibraryThing member robsack
A fun murder mystery. The usual Hamilton operatic cast of characters. Makes me want to read the other Greg Mandel story.
LibraryThing member RandyStafford
My reaction to reading this novel in 2001. Spoilers follow.

Hamilton tries to put some of the psi powers in this series on a rational footing by evoking quantum physics in the figure of the roguish, rather hippyish Professor Edward Kitchener who takes syntho drugs to try to peer, through interlinked
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wormholes, into the past and other time tracks and, possibly, develop a stardrive as well as coming up with grand unified theory combining all of physics with psychic powers. While I found this novel enjoyable, I didn't like it as well as it's predecessor, Mindstar Rising. The mind control program beamed into the brain via laser beam was not convincingly rationalized though it made for an interesting fight at novel's end with Mandel confronting a group of zombies. The novel seemed to dwell longer on Julia Evans then strictly necessary for the plot, but then Hamilton is once again, as with Ione Saldana in his Night's Dawn trilogy, creating a young, likeable (if flawed) princess type character that everyone is either in awe of or loves. I did like the simmering conflicts between the Trinities and the remnants, just a suburb away, of the People's Socialist Party constabulary (and the scene where Mandel confronts a pathetic old PSP constable was good) and how most people want to put the PSP days of England behind them.
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LibraryThing member brakketh
An enjoyable addition to the Mandel series.
LibraryThing member expatscot
Carries the series on well enough and draws you towards book 3. Not bad.
LibraryThing member majackson
Even allowing for the fact that I think the author's digression into poetically erudite space-fillers is a big distraction for me (I don't care what kind of stylish clothing everyone is wearing--what the hell does any of it have to do with the plot?), his stories are, otherwise, really good. A good
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'locked room" murder mystery, with a lot of sideline action that serves to fill in a lot of the background story of the milieu--or, sometimes is just more digression. I also have to admit that Hamilton portrays a pretty convincing "England after the sea levels rise and swamp the British coasts; and after a fascist right wing government has mostly lost control of Britain; and one of the super industrial cartels is taken over by a savvy teenage heiress". In any case, if the haute couture entices some females to read his stories, the more power to him...and them. [And, I must add that I don't remember any such problems with Hamilton's later stories---'Pandora's Star' & 'Judas Unchained' had no such distractions that I can remember.] One other thing that bothered me is Barclay Shaw's cover illustration: both characters look much too young, and the Eleanor on the cover does not match her description in the book!
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LibraryThing member ChrisRiesbeck
Readable but disappointing for me. I was impressed with Hamilton's Night's Dawn trilogy and OK with the Void Trilogy. This book, second in the earlier Mandel trilogy, has none of the cosmic expanse of those later works. It is set in an intermediate future -- say 50 years on -- and takes place
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completely in England. For me this smaller scope hurts. Dubious science can be forgiven in the far future in an intergalactic conflict. It's another to see it in a cozy murder. Both the method of murder and how the detection makes a key discovery depend on nonsense technology that I would expect in a second-tier TV series. There is also a secondary plot involving a rich heiress and her computer-simulated grandfather that seems like an homage to Heinlein's worst elements.

Read if you want, but no need to seek it out.
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Original publication date

1994-04

Physical description

352 p.; 8.3 inches

ISBN

0312859546 / 9780312859541
Page: 0.1987 seconds