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COLOR OF A MIRROR by Daniel Adams-Dufresne

COLOR OF A MIRROR

by Daniel Adams-DufresneDaniel Adams-Dufresne

Pub Date: Nov. 20th, 2023
ISBN: 9798989325801
Publisher: ArtificeLux

On a dangerous, corporate-colonized moon of the future, a cyborg music star, a heartbroken artist, and a hacker are ensnared in intrigue and murder.

Adams-Dufresne SF noir mystery is set on Earth's moon in the late 21st century. Decades earler, circa the 2040s, attempts to create international, viable human lunar colonies failed, leaving the cold, inhospitable moon with abandoned mines and underground complexes. Here, the unsavory TEM corporation constructed the Dive, a megacity drawing misfits and suspicious character. Its economy is based on next-generation internet, vice tourism, and questionable cryptocurrency. Among the characters roaming this dark world are Mirian Sasklowic, who finds it easier to live life with multiple prosthetic limbs in the moon’s low gravity. She seeks to reinvent herself as “Tonic,” the frontwoman of the rock band AKA:NO. Her faltering career attracts police attention when AKA:NO’s release “Kill-Song” appears on the playlist of an enigmatic gang member and terrorist who slaughters several commuters in the public transport. In a parallel (and much fuzzier) plotline, graffiti artist Kaet Westergaard, nursing multiple heartaches, partners with his hacker ex-girlfriend, Blau, to unearth the Dive’s most guarded secrets, using the stolen credentials of a missing, possibly mob-connected VIP. Either plotline has the potential to anchor an action-thriller, but Adams-Dufresne instead unusually delves into the characters’ psychologies, their often unhappy relationships, and their attempts to maintain equilibrium in an off-planet environment. This last becomes especially critical for Tonic’s tale as her extensive cybernetics fail and her post-operative delirium seems to provide clues to her traumatic backstory. However, a late-arriving major twist awaits the reader—and then a few more beyond that, splintering what was already a moody, meandering narrative through environments not unlike those in the classic film Blade Runner: “Blocky shapes line her vision, multiple rows of them, all covered with a layer of dust except one, where the dust and the cloudy vinyl cover beneath have been peeled back, like an old scab clinging to the edge of an even older computer.” Those with adventurous tastes for extremes of cyberpunk will be best equipped for this lunar journey.

Intricate next-generation cyberpunk with a head -spinning finale.