Pacific State

The Sundown Series: Book Two

Grant Price’s cyberpunk thriller Pacific State follows a revenge assassination scheme in future-set, corporation-dominated Berlin, where skyscrapers loom over a devastated environment.

Mia is a crusading mercenary; Owen is a former radical who became a suit. Mia enlists Owen’s help for a high-stakes mission: she aims to take out a sadistic businessman, Luc, who operates on girls with no anesthetic despite not being a surgeon. He killed one patient, leading the deceased’s mother to place a bounty on him. But Luc is also heir to Habanik Entertainment, a powerful corporation whose offerings include an immersive reality suite in which citizens can murder each other “for a nominal fee.” It bankrolls the police and surrounds Luc with bodyguards, making him a dangerous target.

Set against a backdrop of climate carnage and unchecked corporate power, the book excels at worldbuilding, dropping evocative hints at the full scope of its dystopia. It’s peppered with slang references to foodstuffs, new technology, and organized crime that pique interest in its wider world. It mixes oracular pronouncements with striking descriptions in prose that is stylish and sometimes beautiful, as when a building is described as having a “dreadnought silhouette” that creates “a negative space in an overcast sky,” or with notes about “sodium-lit streets” and a “spit-shined moon hung up on display.” And Mia tangles with drones and shady underworld figures while planning Luc’s assassination, leading to frequent adrenaline-packed action scenes, as when she jumps off a hyperscraper to escape.

Setting up the next series installment well, the electrifying science fiction novel Pacific State follows a revenge mission against a powerful businessman.

Reviewed by Joseph S. Pete

Disclosure: This article is not an endorsement, but a review. The publisher of this book provided free copies of the book to have their book reviewed by a professional reviewer. No fee was paid by the publisher for this review. Foreword Reviews only recommends books that we love. Foreword Magazine, Inc. is disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.

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