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THE CLOCKMAKER'S TALE by Ian Williams

THE CLOCKMAKER'S TALE

And Other Stories

by Ian Williams

Pub Date: June 20th, 2021
Publisher: Self

SF author Williams offers six SF tales set in a dystopian future, headlined by a tale of an old-style craftsman in a high-tech tomorrow.

Williams’ compact short stories occur in landscapes devastated by war and pollution. An exception (maybe) is the title piece, but “A Clockmaker’s Tale” too carries the author’s mixed view of technology’s consequences. In a society of flying cars and other breakthroughs, George Sebastian Phillips, an artisan, still laboriously services, maintains, and builds mechanical clocks by hand. A salesman convinces him to try the “Work Buddy,” an AI skull attachment that allows users to drowse and sleep while their bodies continue to do skilled labor. No harm in that, right? George’s efficiency improves, but, predictably, at a horrible cost. More benign are the intelligent robots in “10,000”; a pair of AIs on the moon attempt to revive the human race after a fiendish biological weapon erases humans from the Earth. A specimen pool of 10,000 cryogenically frozen human volunteers are available for the robots’ research, but failure and frustration bring grief even to the automatons. Two tales, “Post-Truth Tours” and “Law and Disorder,” may well unfold in the same bleak world, a place where stern AI judgments face anyone who defies social norms. “Waste Not,” perhaps the most thought-provoking entry, envisions a hellish, garbage-choked dystopian society and a poor family man taking a desperate chance to escape it. “Last Bus to Freedom,” the tale with the least obvious SF trappings—mainly war drones and mythical place names—is mostly action, describing a POW uprising and harrowing attempted escape through enemy lines. Like his horror-oriented compatriot Charles Birkin, Williams tells his material matter-of-factly and doesn’t shy away from pain and doom, though his attitude is not as pessimistic as Birkin’s. Genre readers may note the absence of space aliens in the assortment. Homo sapiens (and their silicon-chip cohorts) provide more than enough trouble, mayhem, and solutions-that-are-worse-than-the-problems, thank you.

Easily read sextet of largely cautionary SF tales in the old-fashioned manner.

(science fiction)