Pierre Ouellette
Autor von Die DEUS-Maschine
Über den Autor
Werke von Pierre Ouellette
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Getagged
Wissenswertes
- Andere Namen
- Davis, Pierre
- Geburtstag
- 1945
- Geschlecht
- male
- Nationalität
- USA
- Wohnorte
- Portland, Oregon, USA
Lake Oswego, Oregon, USA - Berufe
- marketer
producer
guitarist - Agent
- Inkwell Management
- Kurzbiographie
- [from Amazon website]
Pierre Ouellette (aka Pierre Davis) entered the creative realm at age 13 as a lead guitarist for numerous bands in the Pacific Northwest, including the nationally known Paul Revere and the Raiders. He went on to play with such jazz luminaries as saxophonist Jim Pepper and bassist David Friesen, all the while composing soundtracks for short films and videos.
To support his music habit, he became a freelance writer and eventually co-founded an advertising agency specializing in high technology, serving as its creative director. During this period, he wrote two novels, The Deus Machine and The Third Pandemic, eventually published in seven languages and both optioned for film.
His third novel, A Breed Apart was published in 2009 to highly favorable reviews, followed by Origin Unknown, which explores the relationship between neurobiology and evil. He then switched genres to historical crime with Bakersfield, Haight Street, and A Shot Away, all set in the California music scene between the mid-50's and the early 70's. Along the way, he directed and produced The Losers Club, a documentary about struggling musicians, which was broadcast on public television and exhibited at numerous film festivals.
His current novel, The Forever Man, will be out this fall. It's a rewrite of a story he first wrote decades ago set in a futuristic Portland, Oregon beset with political riots, rampant crime, and a massive homeless population. Sound familiar? He is currently researching a work based on a precipitous collapse of the global population.
Pierre lives in Lake Oswego, Oregon and still plays an occasional jazz guitar gig, when he feels his chops are up to it.
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Set in the near future in Portland, Oregon, society has eroded into the haves and have-nots. Corruption, amoral behavior and greed have taken over. The land has broken down to sections ruled by various crime lords and the government/law enforcement is likely just as corrupt as the rogue leaders. If you have the money, you will be living in privately guarded enclaves and constantly seeking a way to extend your life through various medical procedures. If you don't have money you will be scrambling hard to find some way to get by, avoid confrontations with local bad-boy enforcers, and likely with some self-medication to try to make it all tolerable.
Lane Anslow is a contract cop in his 40's who is at the low end of the pay scale and on the verge of being considered too old for the job. Lane's brother, Johnny, is a brilliant medical researcher who has just made the break-through discovery to reverse aging that everyone seeks - but especially Thomas Zed, a man wealthy beyond imagination who wants nothing more than to live forever. Now Johnny has disappeared and it is up to Lane to save him, again. Lane must untangle what Johnny has discovered and who would be trying to kill both of them.
The Forever Man worked as a noir crime fiction novel for me, one that just happened to be set in the future. The sci-fi elements are there and believable, but it's the search and digging up information in a bleak world that really propelled the novel along and compelled me to read faster. The sci-fi elements of the world are just a given, they are just background and there as Lane tries to stay alive and figure out what has happened to Johnny and why. Lane is a great character, he has his standards, but he also knows that he may have to revise them in order to survive. His search takes him through all levels of society.
The back story of characters is developed through flashbacks, a technique that works for this novel, and I thought the character development was good. Ouellette raises some interesting questions about seeking to live forever - or beyond the Gompertz Curve - and what questions might arise with living an extremely long life. This is done embedded in the story rather than in a pushy, glaringly obvious lecturing way, something I appreciate.
Disclosure: I received an advanced reading copy of this book from Random House for TLC review purposes.… (mehr)