Wednesday 7 September 2016

The Thousandth Floor by Katharine McGee

It was actually quite amusing, because I had to keep reminding myself of the beginning and where the story was supposed to be heading.

It starts off with a dramatic fall, suicide, accident or death and ends the same way. There is so much drama in the middle that it just slipped my mind completely.

It's a pity the premise is more of Gossip Girl scenario, because McGee has some really interesting ideas. The towers and the caste structure are worth exploring in more depth. Then there is the Nadia the quant, both this and the futuristic communication in combination with the world-building is quite fascinating.

What it comes down to in the end is rich people vs poor people and the ex-rich who want to be rich again, because they hate being poor. Oh and girlfriend and boyfriend trouble. Nothing too complex. Again, such a contradiction in the mixture of ideas. A bit like creating a complex void structure and then filling it completely with candy floss.

Even in the future the young still seek a high and spend all their time worrying about their love lives. So much for advanced technology and spectacular development. I shouldn't be surprised by the fact humans will always be shallow entities no matter how many centuries into the future.

Buy The Thousandth Floor at Amazon Uk or go to Goodreads for any other retailer.

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