About Duffbert...

Duffbert's Random Musings is a blog where I talk about whatever happens to be running through my head at any given moment... I'm Thomas Duff, and you can find out more about me here...

Email Me!

Search This Site!

Custom Search

I'm published!

Co-author of the book IBM Lotus Sametime 8 Essentials: A User's Guide
SametimeBookCoverImage.jpg

Purchase on Amazon

Co-author of the book IBM Sametime 8.5.2 Administration Guide
SametimeAdminBookCoverImage.jpg

Purchase on Amazon

MiscLinks

Visitor Count...



View My Stats

« IBM threatens to leave standards bodies | Main| Book Review - Borderline by Mark Schorr »

Book Review - The Broken Window by Jeffrey Deaver

Category Book Review Jeffrey Deaver The Broken Window

A picture named M2

I look forward to Lincoln Rhyme novels, so I was happy when my number finally came up at the library for Jeffrey Deaver's The Broken Window.  As a technology geek, I *really* got into this story line.  I'll grant that there was some level of "literary licence" taken in the plot, but it's still an unsettling look at what's going on with data mining and personal privacy.

Rhyme, the quadriplegic genius who takes forensic crime science to a new level, gets involved in a new case that's personal.  His cousin Arthur is accused of a murder that he swears he didn't commit.  The evidence begs to differ, however.  Everything at the crime scene and in Arthur's personal life points in exacting detail to his involvement.  There's some bad blood between Rhyme and his cousin, and he's not all too keen on getting involved in what appears to be an open-and-shut case.  But he softens a bit and decides to ask a couple of questions.  What he finds is that the evidence is *too* perfect...  almost as if everything was staged to the nth degree.  He's also able to find a few other murder cases that share the same "perfectness", despite the protests of the accused.  The investigation leads to a data mining company, Strategic Systems Datacorp, who has a seemingly infinite amount of information on nearly everyone in the US.  But their operation is shrouded in secrecy, and too many people seem to be deathly afraid of crossing swords with them.  If someone at the company had detailed information about what the victims and accused bought, where they went, and what they did, they *could* create perfect crimes.  Rhyme and his partner Amelia Sachs have to determine who at the company had means and motive.  But if the hunted has all of Rhyme's information, just who is the hunted and who is the hunter?

I liked this on a couple of different levels.  From pure story and plot, I had a hard time putting down the book.  The identity of the killer stays nebulous for a large part of the book, so the suspense stays at a pretty high level.  The other facet of the story is the whole issue of data mining and personal privacy.  If all the information that's collected about you is gathered in a single place, your life literally becomes an open book.  Not only do they know everything about you, but they can start to predict what you might and might not do with surprising accuracy.  I think you can draw the inference to today's society.  While it's true (I hope) that an actual Strategic Systems Datacorp doesn't exist, it's no longer outside the realm of possibility.  This is a very good thriller with some interesting concepts to mull over.

Post A Comment

:-D:-o:-p:-x:-(:-):-\:angry::cool::cry::emb::grin::huh::laugh::lips::rolleyes:;-)

Want to support this blog or just say thanks?

When you shop Amazon, start your shopping experience here.

When you do that, all your purchases during that session earn me an affiliate commission via the Amazon Affiliate program. You don't have to buy the book I linked you to (although I wouldn't complain!). Simply use that as your starting point.

Thanks!

Thomas "Duffbert" Duff

Ads of Relevance...