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TWO TRUTHS AND A LIE by Cory O'Brien

TWO TRUTHS AND A LIE

by Cory O'Brien

Pub Date: March 4th, 2025
ISBN: 9780593687284
Publisher: Pantheon

Even in a future world where both landscapes and personal identities are way too fluid, murders still happen, and their solutions must be found. No matter what (or who) is damaged along the way.

Never mind the exact year. All you need to know is that sometime in the future, coastal cities like Los Angeles are all but halfway submerged in water and there has been so much war in the interim that it’s hard to know who won or lost. Still, people adapt to change as they always have and Orr Vue, a grizzled, sardonic retired soldier and professional “fact checker” for a powerful data-collecting company called InfoDrip, insists on living as quiet a SoCal life as super-stressed socio-environmental circumstances permit. Somehow, there’s always LAPD around, and they pick up Orr for questioning about the murder of his employer, Thomas Mahoney. Orr’s not a suspect, but Auggie Wolf, his fellow war vet and one-time lover, is being held for interrogation. Even though the cops are sure they have their man, they allow Orr to dig further into the case using his facility with piercing through foggy deceptions with factoids—and with wielding surplus military drones. Also interested in using Orr’s detecting skills is Mahoney’s daughter, Marianna, enigmatic and, of course, beautiful, though the old soldier isn’t satisfied with using that mere adjective: “[She] had a body that hit my eyes harder than tear gas, lit up my nervous system like a dozen Tasers, made my heart pound harder than a panic attack, and took my breath away like a week of water-boarding…I wanted to tell her secrets until I ran out of them, and then make some up just to keep on talking.” That sentence should give you some idea of how O’Brien keeps your head in the action with antic, lyrical wit and vivid—if sometimes bewildering—action scenes as Orr’s search for Mahoney’s killer becomes more brutally complex. It all works out in extremely weird, perversely satisfying ways.

This used to be labeled “cyberpunk.” Some believe it’ll be called “real life,” sooner or later.