Living 'Off the Grid' With The Traveler
by
Wally Conger
by Wally Conger
This
is turning out to be the Year of the Libertarian Novel.
First,
columnist Vin Suprynowicz crossed Batman with samurai freedom-fighters
to produce his powerful The
Black
Arrow. A short time later, Claire Wolfe and Aaron Zelman
launched the terrific RebelFire
1.0: Out of the Gray Zone, the first in a projected series
of "young adult" novels about freedom and self-reliance.
Now
here comes The
Traveler, by first-time novelist John Twelve Hawks. While
it’s not as explicitly libertarian as The Black Arrow, nor
as well written as Out of the Gray Zone, it’s still an exhilarating
addition to the growing catalog of freedom fiction.
In
quick summary, The Traveler takes place in a post-9/11 future
(maybe 15 minutes from now) where there is "the appearance
of freedom with the reality of control." Every person’s actions
are tracked by the Vast Machine, a complex web of computerized information
systems accessed constantly by government, large corporations, and
even "benign" nonprofits like the Evergreen Foundation,
a front for forces interested only in world domination. Most people
surrender to (or choose to ignore) this 24/7 monitoring of their
lives in exchange for false security from terrorism and street crime.
But some prefer to live "off the Grid," away from the
prying electronic eyes of the Vast Machine.
Upon
this backdrop, author Twelve Hawks presents the riveting story of
a centuries-long battle between those who want to control history
(the Tabula, or Brethren) and those who value the human spirit and
seek freedom (the Travelers and their warrior-guardians, the Harlequins).
As one character in the novel reveals, "The facts you know
are mostly an illusion. The real struggle of history is going on
beneath the surface."
All
of the computer surveillance technology portrayed in The Traveler
actually exists and is based on the author’s research. Regular visitors
to LewRockwell.com won’t be surprised by many of the novel’s revelations
about the end of privacy, but most other readers will be startled
by them.
The
Traveler may seem at times a hodgepodge of science fiction,
spiritual prophecy, and conspiracy thriller, laced with smatterings
of The
Matrix, popular videogames, and Kill
Bill. But it never loses its footing. It’s a solid, fast-paced
corker of a novel. And its heart is certainly in the right place.
The bad guys are as dark, bureaucratic, and authoritarian as they
come. And the good guys...well, all they want is a world
where they can be left alone to live, love, and create. (Several
scenes in the book even take place in an "off the Grid"
community called New Harmony. Shades of Galt’s Gulch!)
Unlike
the recent Suprynowicz and Wolfe/Zelman novels both published
by small publishing houses with tiny marketing budgets that rely
heavily on the kindness of online reviewers and libertarian bloggers
The Traveler comes from a publishing giant and has
an aggressive marketing campaign behind it. I first read about the
book and its author a few weeks ago in a splashy USA Today
article, and then visited a handful of official websites publicizing
it. (One of the novel’s characters even writes her
own blog.) Doubleday’s PR department is busily promoting the
author as an "off the Grid" celebrity who’s unwilling
to do the traditional book tours; "John Twelve Hawks"
is a pseudonym, and the writer only talks to his editors by satellite
phone or through the Internet. I also hear that a major movie studio
has optioned the book.
All
of this hype may deter you from buying and reading The Traveler,
or from eventually pursuing the two sequels already planned. Don’t
let that happen. With its compelling warnings about the Security
State, its "secret history" point of view, and its hardcore
advocacy of liberty, this novel deserves to be a bestseller. (It
has reached #13 so far on the New York Times bestseller list.)
Buy a copy for yourself, and then buy copies for your friends.
This
is the closest we’ve been in a long time to seeing a libertarian-leaning
novel break into the mainstream in a big way. And nowadays, we need
all the effective media tools we can muster.
July
22, 2005
Wally
Conger [send him mail] is
a marketing consultant and writer who reluctantly lives "on the
Grid" along California’s central coast. His blog of unfinished essays
and spontaneous eruptions on politics and culture can be found at
wconger.blogspot.com.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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Conger Archives
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