Shimmer, by Eric Barnes is A Good Read.
Robbie Case is the head of Core, a multi-million dollar company that he unwittingly founds with his cousin Trevor. Dealing in selling blue boxes full of high technology that greatly improves the speed and flow of information, he’s walking around with the secret that none of it works. Each sale and success story brings Core closer to collapse- which could happen at anytime- making Robbie Case a rich man, even as it bankrupts everyone around him who has worked for and believed in Core for the three years since its inception. Robbie only sleeps two hours per night and and spends the rest of his time overseeing Core while trying to save it and the people who work for him from its ultimate demise. Robbie keeps track of the elaborate lie that runs Core with a program that he especially designed called Shimmer, but time is running out and someone is onto Robbie. The race is on to find out who knows his secrets and when that happens there is a big price that he and everyone well have to pay for his lies.
It took me awhile to get into this story. The beginning chapters are a set up of the technology and the company, and I only had the barest grasp of what was going on. As the outline of how it all worked presented itself, and the novel shifted to examine the human element I became more absorbed in Robbie and his cousin Trevor’s distinct personalities, and why each of them would embark on such a risky proposition as the one in which they were involved. Robbie particularly gambles and the only collateral that he has against telling such a monstrous lie is that he has always believed that hard work is the solution to every problem. I’m not really sure that I was ever convinced of Robbie’s theory of hard work motivating him to perpetuate such a lie and a gamble with people’s livelihoods, and even if that were true the reasoning is beyond flawed, but it was enough to move along the story.
The narrative of the novel alternates between Robbie’s own first person perspective and third person mini-chapters outlining the doubts that each member of his senior staff is experiencing about the company. Each of them is highly qualified for their position, intelligent and at the top of their game. Robbie’s staff have different reasons for having committed so much of their lives to Core, usually to the detriment of their personal lives, and each is dangerously close to being able to put their finger on the undefinable thing that is wrong with the bog picture. No one understand how the blue box technology works. Barnes does a terrific job of maintaining the suspense and I was on pins and needles throughout my reading, wondering if the house of cards was going to come tumbling down due to inside forces or to the simultaneous threats coming from outside the company.
Robbie Case is a deeply flawed character- stemming from both his childhood and his strange personality mix of hubris and naivete. Some of the novel started getting a little bit repetitive to me as he goes through the same motions while trying to figure out a solution that will help the company and release him from the burden that he has been carrying. Though I found what Robbie did to be reprehensible I really wanted him to be able to figure things out for the sake of the people that worked at Core.
If you have advanced knowledge of computers and business acumen then it would be very easy to get into this one on the perils of not integrity- or the lack thereof- in big business. The how’s it going to end aspect really keeps the book moving along and it manages to stay interesting even though the entire thing takes place inside the same office building. There are some truly gripping scenes when the blue boxes that Core manufactures come under attack. This was definitely a suspenseful read.
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Hummm. I’m not sure that this would be a good match for me.
.-= Beth F´s last blog ..Review: Delectable Mountains by Earlene Fowler =-.
The tech stuff was a little hard at first. I was definitely worried. The people part had me hooked.
I love the sound of this story, it sounds like a thrilling read. I just think I would struggle with the technical side of the first few chapters.
.-= vivienne´s last blog ..Girls In Trucks by Katie Crouch =-.
I really wondered if I would like it, but once I got to know the people I really wanted to see what would happen to them and who it was that would bring Robbie down. I knew he didn’t deserve to have everything work out for him but at the same time I didn’t want him to get caught either.
I don’t know if I’d be able to follow a technology thriller or not. There was something about computers in a book I was listening to and I had to get Vance to explain it to me.
.-= Kathy´s last blog ..Review: Finger Lickin’ Fifteen =-.
I think it’s probably not so important to follow the story. Ironically, no one in the story knew how the blue boxes worked either.
It actually sounds like it could be a very intriguing and ethical read. Technical stuff like that though does tend to lose me…too complicated, but with the human thread there it sounds like the book turned out to be a good read.
.-= Staci´s last blog ..Review: The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie =-.
I have to say that it was very suspenseful. I liked the author’s style and will probably read him again as long as it’s not another computer/tech story.
I loved Shimmer! There were parts that I had to concentrate on, but I particularly loved the dialogue. The interaction between the executive staff was hilarious.
.-= Bookfool, aka Nancy´s last blog ..June Reads in Review (2009) =-.
Perry was my favorite from the exec staff. I love how he was “retired” but still knew all the company’s business because no one had cut him off from having access to the reports.