A scientist’s daughter quietly refines quantum human teleportation and teams up with a venture capitalist, but their plan hits deadly turbulence when the predatory CEO of an airline corporation tries to violently hijack the technology.
Heaton’s first installment of The Race Is On techno-thriller series is set in 2002-03, a pivotal time for the protagonists—and the airline industry, a key villain. A slump in air transport following the terrorist atrocities of 9/11 means America’s once-mighty Reynolds Air faces financial ruin. CEO Samuel Reynolds III sees an opportunity to revitalize the ailing company (and save his own reputation). It seems that in Iceland, Uma Jacobsdottir, a pretty, green-minded activist and daughter of a great quantum physicist, has secretly perfected teleportation—the near-instantaneous breakdown and reassembly of atomic matter (including humans) at “LEAP” portals, even at vast distances. The technology has astounding and disturbing applications and implications, but Uma wants to restrict it to long-range transport, eliminating fossil fuels and carbon emissions. She enlists Ethan Rae, a shadowy but ethical venture capitalist from England, to take the discovery public (“Your approach to business benefits everyone, especially the less well-off”). But ruthless Reynolds wants to monopolize LEAP for pure profit, sending hit men and hackers on the attack. Ethan hastily teleports during the crisis, experiencing side effects somewhat familiar to readers of the classic SF short story “The Fly” and viewers of the film adaptations. But here, the result is a strategic advantage, not a monster mutation. The international novel is a page-turner with bigger-than-life heroes and villains, rousing action, aerospace history, a built-in Icelandic travelogue, captivating SF concepts, and joyous storytelling (though important bits of backstory remain conspicuously scattered in the author’s 2022 prequel novella, MAD). Despite the airline business tycoons’ being portrayed as scoundrels, this volume is ideal in-flight diversion fare, worthy of those concourse gift-shop spinner racks full of novels by Alistair MacLean, Michael Crichton, and Clive Cussler. Heaton fact-checks his science and settings in an afterword and invites readers to support him if they want to see the saga continue. It’s likely that most will.
Fasten your seat belts and adjust your tray tables; this SF tale offers an exciting ride.
(science fiction)