The vaults

by Toby Ball

Paper Book, 2010

Status

Available

Call number

813/.6

Publication

New York : St. Martin's Press, 2010.

Description

In a dystopian 1930s America, a chilling series of events leads three men down a path to uncover their city's darkest secret. A mysterious duplicate file is discovered deep within the Vaults, and their investigations call into question whether their most basic beliefs can be maintained in a climate of overwhelming corruption and conspiracy.

User reviews

LibraryThing member ehines
Some really good ideas here. The alternative past with no obvious big change having happened is interesting. The power not just of information, but the power of organization--the ability to find what you want and to relate one bit of data to another. The setting--a kind of 1930s or 40s city,
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corrupt and heavily divided by race, class, ethnicity and use--is well and not-too-sentimentally done. Ball is very, very good at creating a sense of atmosphere. Though his "City" is generic, there seems to been a lot of research dumped into this project, and Ball uses it to great effect here.

Also has more than a whiff of the novels of the era he is re-creating here--socially conscious, with an unstable mixture of cynicism and hope.

In keeping with some of the books in that tradition, politics is very much to the forefront and, here, unfortunately, very much at the level of juvenilia. (Not that I disagree with it, just that there's not an ounce of insight in it)

And a lot else is spoiled by (I suspect) a rather too business savvy editor and the pressing need to set up a sequel.

I'm pretty sure "setup for next" includes the choice of one potential protagonist and the cliche-riddled killing off of another. In a world where no genre novel is a standalone, they all seem to stumble and lurch and lean drunkenly against one another.
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Language

Original publication date

2010

Physical description

344 p.; 25 inches

ISBN

0312580738 / 9780312580735
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