In this futuristic, cyberpunk world Inspector Angel Cardenas is an 'intuit' trained to recognise telltales of speech and behaviour that make it seem as though he is almost telepathic. He will need all of those skills on the case that begins with a murder Victim with two different ID's one implanted and one DNA based. Then the victims wife and teenage daughter vanish and Angel slowly puts together the pieces in an unbelievable scenario of futuristic crime.
There is no point in revealing more of the plot, I loved it, but one of it's strengths is the slow unfolding. The writing is amazing; Alan Dean Foster wrote many of the science fiction books that were most beloved to me as I was growing up and his writing ability is even better now than it was. The characters are fascinating, layered and nuanced I believed in them all and thoroughly enjoyed reading about them.
The world building was outstanding, in this future world most of the Eastern seaboard of the USA is one continuous habitation known as 'The Strip', within which different layers of society, different trends, music and entertainment flourish. The legal side by side with the illegal, or rather; the Soc with the antisoc, because part of what makes this book so rich and fascinating is that the author has created a new language to fit his new world. The slang, common speech patterns and concepts are all well portrayed and with infinite skill, he does so in such a way that the reader can understand most of the slang and language from the context. I never once had to look something up in the glossary at the back to see what something meant!
This is a marvelous skill that I cannot rate too highly; Spanglish is what most people speak, a combination of Spanish and English, (a very insightful and likely thing to happen in the future USA, I suspect). I have read so many books that have tried to combine Spanish into the narrative and done it clumsily, so that I did not always understand what was being said. Here is a master of this technique at work, and I just talked myself into another star....
The world building was what really made this one for me. There is also a brief appearance of an Aussie criminal gang sortie "The ooze from Oz" that managed to pack every single outrageous Aussie slang into a mere paragraph or two, I laughed my head off at that! That is another thing about this book, it does not take itself too seriously, a lot of the time the action, language and events are tongue in cheek and this lightness and sly humour made it ever so much more readable.
There were so many tiny throwaway events and futuristic notions, the 'Ciudad Simiano' was a fascinating and brilliant concept, the notion of an operation to implant Cephalopod chromatophores in humans so that they can colour change, well, it absolutely thrilled me and it was inserted into the narrative so very well!
I would throughly recommend it to anyone who has liked The authors Orphan Star series, there is a lot of that society building skill evident in the construction of The Strip. I would also recommend it to anyone who likes cyberpunk. Brilliant find.