date: 2016-01-15 18:48:09 title: If Then - a Review In a near future world, the systems of government and economy have completely collapsed. The citizens of the United Kingdom, abandoned by the state, have been left to survive as best they can. Some eke out an existence in the abandoned countryside, while others have sold themselves to private interests, among them the people of Lewes. That town is now owned and controlled by The Process, a computer algorithm, designed to maximise the available resources, including the people, marshalling them for an eventual resurrection of proper governance. That a least is the theory. The reality is that the people of Lewes have sold themselves, their emotions, desires, fears, their every waking moment, to the Process, so the system can be perfected prior to implementation across the remnants of Britain. James, the Bailiff, is closely integrated to the Process, acting as the literal embodiment of its most terrible decisions, while his wife Ruth has found her role as a teacher in the local school. This is an accomplished work of science-fiction/fantasy from De Abaitua. So much of this book is done so very well that it should be attaining higher praise from me. The worldbuilding is expertly handled, the revelation of the collapses of society which led to the current world inhabited by the characters is never trite or simplistic. I particularly loved those parts of the book set in the town of Lewes, with the Eviction Night being a highlight. The problem is that the book then goes off the rails, and not just a little, but completely. De Abaitua has _clearly_ put a lot of research into the disaster at Suvla Bay during the Gallipoli Campaign, it was nice to read references to the various Irish (The Inniskillings, Munster Fusiliers) and the Sikh Regiments who suffered and died there, as opposed to the usual ANZAC-oriented mythos of the conflict^1. It was just that there was just so much of the detail of Suvla on the page that it completely overwhelmed the narrative. Writing about war and battles to give the reader an appreciation of the conflict and its effects on the participants while giving detail of the actual fighting is **hard**, but it can be done succesfully, some examples which come to mind would be (for example) Kim Stanley Robinson's _The Years of Rice and Salt_, or Steven Erikson's _Deadhouse Gates_. I don't think De Abaitua succeeds here, as I found myself just skimming over pages. Which is a shame, because the story remains atmospheric, and the twin stories of the Bailiff and his wife are, in their own ways, utterly compelling, as is the meditation on war and conflict which forms the key narrative element. I just wish he'd left out most of the middle third of the book. "If Then" by Matthew De Abaitua was published by Angry Robot Books in September 2015, and may be purchased from various online retailers and book stores. If you wish to use my Amazon Affiliate link, that would be cool. ---------------------------------------------------------------- ^1: Thanks to Eric Bogle and his wonderful, albeit maudlin and ahistorical, "And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda"