I went back and read your earlier entry last night, and then went and looked at some trailers and clips, I was so intrigued (you truly captured in prose how the setting looked, stylistically).
That makes me really happy to hear! I love the production design of The Robots of Death, not least because corporate dystopias are so often homogenized or utilitarian and this one is diverse and gorgeous and carelessly decorative. It looks fantastic. I just wouldn't want to live there. (I already live here.)
So now I have to ask--please go ahead and spoil me--what does Boucher imagine happens next?
An extremely complicated conspiracy! Set perhaps a decade after the events of The Robot of Death, the plot of Corpse Marker concerns the efforts of the Company administration to reconsolidate their power against self-made upstarts like Uvanov by hiring an off-world psycho-strategist (one of Boucher's characters from Blake's 7, which I can appreciate in the abstract even though I have not actually seen the show) to stage a shell game of assassinations and investigations intended to culminate in the public revelation of the truth behind the tragedy of Storm Mine 4, discrediting the former generation of robots in favor of a new, deliberately human-appearing class whose introduction would otherwise have met with much more resistance while at the same time demonstrating the transparency and stability of traditional family rule, with the bonus that one of the assassinations would have been Uvanov's. Like many extremely complicated conspiracies, it does not go according to plan for multiple reasons, including the return of the Doctor and Leela. But one of its prongs involves psychologically destabilizing Poul in the guise of treating his PTSD so that he can be easily and defenselessly framed for the new-style-robot-committed murders of Toos and Uvanov, neatly wiping out all three survivors of Storm Mine 4 in case the revelation of the truth behind its tragedy should need to differ from the reality of the truth. All three of them make it out alive! Poul is actually doing far better by the end of the novel than its beginning, although he has some very rough patches for most of it! But the plot of the novel as well as the schemes of the psycho-strategist require him to have no conscious recall of the events that traumatized him, whereas I needed him to retain his memories—even if he has been spectacularly gaslit about them—because the story occurred to me with the line "He still thought of her sometimes, the girl who had called him a hunter."
I didn't get as far as envisioning an extremely complicated conspiracy, but I agreed with Boucher as far back as The Robots of Death that the society of this unnamed planet is heading for some kind of crack-up if it cannot reckon with its own realities, like the fact that it's all very well to say that robots are incapable of violence when by definition robots are capable of whatever they have been programmed to do. We concurred, with some difference of opinion on the details, on the cover-up of Storm Mine 4, on a desk job for Poul, and that any mental health treatment he received on the part of the Company would have been self-serving to say the least. The problem is really that I want an ending for him like thisbluespirit's "Robophobia (And How to Cure It)" and he persists in living in a hellbent dystopia, but I couldn't believe that his instinct to pursue the missing piece of the puzzle—the incongruity, the implication—would just disappear. It would have been safer for him on Storm Mine 4 to go on denying that robots could be murderers, except he couldn't make it stick even to himself. I am not sure he lives in a culture where it is particularly healthy to be a good investigator. Alternately, he should just be in film noir.
(Toos and Uvanov are fine in my fic, they are just completely off-page because I couldn't even think about mentioning them without risking the story branching off to check for itself.)
no subject
That makes me really happy to hear! I love the production design of The Robots of Death, not least because corporate dystopias are so often homogenized or utilitarian and this one is diverse and gorgeous and carelessly decorative. It looks fantastic. I just wouldn't want to live there. (I already live here.)
So now I have to ask--please go ahead and spoil me--what does Boucher imagine happens next?
An extremely complicated conspiracy! Set perhaps a decade after the events of The Robot of Death, the plot of Corpse Marker concerns the efforts of the Company administration to reconsolidate their power against self-made upstarts like Uvanov by hiring an off-world psycho-strategist (one of Boucher's characters from Blake's 7, which I can appreciate in the abstract even though I have not actually seen the show) to stage a shell game of assassinations and investigations intended to culminate in the public revelation of the truth behind the tragedy of Storm Mine 4, discrediting the former generation of robots in favor of a new, deliberately human-appearing class whose introduction would otherwise have met with much more resistance while at the same time demonstrating the transparency and stability of traditional family rule, with the bonus that one of the assassinations would have been Uvanov's. Like many extremely complicated conspiracies, it does not go according to plan for multiple reasons, including the return of the Doctor and Leela. But one of its prongs involves psychologically destabilizing Poul in the guise of treating his PTSD so that he can be easily and defenselessly framed for the new-style-robot-committed murders of Toos and Uvanov, neatly wiping out all three survivors of Storm Mine 4 in case the revelation of the truth behind its tragedy should need to differ from the reality of the truth. All three of them make it out alive! Poul is actually doing far better by the end of the novel than its beginning, although he has some very rough patches for most of it! But the plot of the novel as well as the schemes of the psycho-strategist require him to have no conscious recall of the events that traumatized him, whereas I needed him to retain his memories—even if he has been spectacularly gaslit about them—because the story occurred to me with the line "He still thought of her sometimes, the girl who had called him a hunter."
I didn't get as far as envisioning an extremely complicated conspiracy, but I agreed with Boucher as far back as The Robots of Death that the society of this unnamed planet is heading for some kind of crack-up if it cannot reckon with its own realities, like the fact that it's all very well to say that robots are incapable of violence when by definition robots are capable of whatever they have been programmed to do. We concurred, with some difference of opinion on the details, on the cover-up of Storm Mine 4, on a desk job for Poul, and that any mental health treatment he received on the part of the Company would have been self-serving to say the least. The problem is really that I want an ending for him like
(Toos and Uvanov are fine in my fic, they are just completely off-page because I couldn't even think about mentioning them without risking the story branching off to check for itself.)