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Intrusion (2012)

von Ken MacLeod

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2711597,891 (3.52)29
Imagine a near-future city, say London, where medical science has advanced beyond our own and a single-dose pill has been developed that, taken when pregnant, eradicates many common genetic defects from an unborn child. Hope Morrison, mother of a hyperactive four-year-old, is expecting her second child. She refuses to take The Fix, as the pill is known. This divides her family and friends and puts her and her husband in danger of imprisonment or worse. Is her decision a private matter of individual choice, or is it tantamount to willful neglect of her unborn child? A plausible and original novel with sinister echoes of 1984 and Brave New World.… (mehr)
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I have a hard time rating this book. I found the narrative generally slow and a bit boring. It didn't keep my interest for more than a page or two at a time.

That said, the ideas that the book deals with are well illustrated and engaging. I don't know if the slow, often boring plot was a necessary side effect of the in-depth analysis and rich world building that help paint a very scary, and extremely plausible view of the future. The dystopian utopia that the characters live in and how it is contrasted with the other side of their "Warm War" shows a lot of things that are on the way to very wrong in our society.

This is, of course, the goal of great sci-fi: paint a picture of a world gone wrong to throw our current world in stark relief and highlight the things that are wrong or going wrong today.

Intrusion does that very well. It's just not that engaging to read (until the last 50 pages).

If you have the time, read it for the ideas, themes and analysis, but don't expect much from the plot. ( )
  boredwillow | Mar 4, 2023 |
This novel follows a couple who are expecting their second child through a dystopian, "day after tomorrow" Britain where genetic engineering is commonplace, but an intrusive state takes it upon itself to draw the worst conclusions from legitimate dissent. There is a type of person - at least, here in the UK - who moans about "the nanny state" and its interventions, real or imagined, in people's everyday lives. But these are also the sort of people who, following any instance of child abuse or neglect, will loudly moan "Why didn't the authorities DO anything???" The world of "Intrusion" shows the logical end point where the state takes the Precautionary Principle to its logical ends.

In a departure from previous books, MacLeod focusses in on the domestic life of Hope and Hugh, and their son Nick. This focus on the personal is something different for MacLeod, but it is the only way this story could have been told. Hope is expecting their second child, and comes under pressure to take "the fix": a one-time bioengineered pill that will fix any genetic defect in her unborn child, But she resents not being able to take that decision for herself. Exemptions for those with faith-based objections exist; but none for "mere" conscience. Parents of "Natural Kids" can complain about the possibility of an unfixed child mixing with their unfixed children, but no-one can complain about their faith-based exemptions posing the same risk, because their faith provides a cast-iron defence again criticism. Presumably, their faith provides an adequate shield for their own kids, whilst the idea that their kids might pose a threat to other Natural Kids from atheistic parents is unthinkable, because that would be religious discrimination.

Through a series of chance encounters, Hope becomes a focus for a range of dissidents. Her attempts to invoke the law amount to nothing; the political process equally offers her no relief. Matters are complicated when her husband and son are shown to possibly have a rare genetic trait connected to the range and depth of their perception, which the fix would remove from their unborn child.

All this is played out against a society where mothers are "protected" against health risks, such as passive smoking, alcohol or caffeine consumption by a state which is prepared to sanction interventions against the slightest infringements. This becomes positively Orwellian when these concerns interact with the ongoing war on terrorism; a shadowy group known as Naxal, emerging from South Asia, appears to be opposed to the very concept of "civilization", and the state is accordingly exercised to root out not only support for Naxal, but any suggestion or questioning that the state itself may be wrong in its attitude towards dissent.

The result is a dystopia that is all too recognisable. MacLeod may have departed from his usual subject and focussed intimately on one family, but his themes and political questioning are what we have come to expect. And ten chapters in, we find that this dystopia is presided over by a Labour government that has wholly embraced the trappings of a traditional socialist party, but underneath it all has a completely statist attitude to power. "Left" and "Right" are by now merely road signs.

The climax of the novel sees Hugh, the husband, fleeing London with the family for the shelter of his ancestral home, the Scottish Isle of Lewis. Here we see just how his genetic inheritance plays out and how it fares when confronted by the secret state and its organs of repression. How this conflict is resolved has some surprises.

I burnt through this novel in a few days; its world is so familiar, so close to our own but only separated from it by a half turn, that I was anxious to see what happened next. It isn't an easy book in terms of its message - too much security can be a bad thing, and MacLeod accurately captures the unthinking hypocrisy of the public and the absurd yet inevitable results that the law can lead inevitably to. Not a comforting read, but probably MacLeod's most important novel to date. ( )
1 abstimmen RobertDay | Oct 9, 2021 |
Disturbing look at how the nanny state could take over all aspects of life in the future.

Concerns a mother who is having second thoughts about taking 'the fix' which is a genetic cure all pill for an unborn child. Set a few years hence, Macleod covers the possibilities of surveillance in the home, monitoring of individuals and so on.

Slightly scary as I think we are part of the way there with the successive governments that we have had. ( )
  PDCRead | Apr 6, 2020 |
Hope Morrison is pregnant with her 2nd child. She does not want to take 'The Fix', a safe and effective cure for genetic abnormalities in the growing fetus. Is Hope abusing her child? There are exemptions for those with religious exemptions, but Hope just wants her choice respected. In Ken MacLeod's latest near-future dystopia, Hope and her family are in for a world of hurt....

I don't respect the philosophical question here. There is no danger in 'the Fix'. This does not seem like a battle worth fighting. An insight perhaps into the mindset of anti-vaxxers, climate change deniers and creationists. I can't agree that these irrational preferences deserve the sympathetic treatment that Macleod provides. ( )
  orkydd | Feb 2, 2017 |
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AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Ken MacLeodHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Rules, MGestaltungCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Taylor, NicoUmschlaggestalterCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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Like any responsible father, Hugh Morrison had installed cameras in every room in the flat.
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Imagine a near-future city, say London, where medical science has advanced beyond our own and a single-dose pill has been developed that, taken when pregnant, eradicates many common genetic defects from an unborn child. Hope Morrison, mother of a hyperactive four-year-old, is expecting her second child. She refuses to take The Fix, as the pill is known. This divides her family and friends and puts her and her husband in danger of imprisonment or worse. Is her decision a private matter of individual choice, or is it tantamount to willful neglect of her unborn child? A plausible and original novel with sinister echoes of 1984 and Brave New World.

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