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Lewis and Lindsay Thorpe were the perfect couple: young, attractive, and ideally matched. But the veil of perfection can mask many blemishes. When the Thorpes are found dead in their tasteful Flagstaff living room (having committed double suicide), alarms go off in the towering Manhattan offices of Eden Incorporated, the high-tech matchmaking company whose spectacular success, and legendary secrecy, has inspired awe around the world. The Thorpes, few people knew, were more than the quintessential happy couple – they were Eden’s first perfect match.
A short time later, Christopher Lash, a gifted former FBI forensic psychologist, receives an urgent plea from Eden to perform a quick – and quiet – investigation into the deaths. Lash’s psychological autopsy reveals nothing suspicious, but inadvertently dredges up the memories of a searing personal tragedy he has kept at bay for years.
The situation changes suddenly when a second Eden couple is found dead -- by all appearances, another double suicide. Now Eden – particularly Richard Silver, the company’s brilliant and reclusive founder – has no choice but to grant Lash unprecedented access to its most guarded secrets if he is to have any chance of determining what is going wrong. The hidden world he discovers is a stunning labyrinth of artificial intelligence, creative genius, and a melding of technology that does indeed, to Lash’s surprise, deliver on Eden’s promise to its clients: the guarantee of a perfect, lifelong mate. But Lash’s involvement in the investigation becomes more personal and dangerous than he could haveimagined, nearly as soon as it begins.
With tremendous imagination and skill, master thriller-writer Lincoln Child renders a setting too frighteningly believable not to be real. Infused with relentless suspense and a riveting pace, DEATH MATCH is Child at his best.
Child's story, while quite ingenious, contains echoes of other stories we all know, from "Frankenstein" to "1984" to "The Stepford Wives" to every mad scientist B-movie we saw as kids...."Death Match" should be a popular beach book this summer because it is slick, sophisticated entertainment, as well as a cautionary tale about artificial intelligence. But the novel is also derivative, uneven and burdened with too much high-tech mumbo jumbo about "avatars" and "computational hyperspace" and "basal compatibilities." Worst of all, it turns out that Liza can't really produce a perfect marriage. If you want one of those, you still have to trust in dumb luck.
More Reviews and RecommendationsLincoln Child is the co-author with Douglas Preston of a bestselling thriller/adventure series. A former book editor at St. Martin's Press, he has published numerous short story anthologies and founded the company's mass market horror division. He also writes novels and techno-thrillers on his own.
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September 27, 2009: I haven't yet read the recent Lee Child books I purchased. I am starting at his #1 book and reading them in order. I have read three of his so far and I think they are great! I am sure the rest will be just as enjoyable.
Name:
Lincoln Child
Place of Birth:
Westport, Connecticut
Education:
B.A., Carleton College, 1979
Born in Westport, CT, in 1958, Preston Child grew up with a consuming interest in writing. (On his website, he acknowledges several short stories from his youth and two "exquisitely embarrassing" novels penned in high school -- and currently kept under lock and key!) He graduated from Carleton College in Minnesota with a degree in English. In 1979, he moved to New York to pursue a career in publishing and was hired by St. Martin's Press as an editorial assistant. By 1984, he had worked his way up to full editor.
It was around this time that Child met Douglas Preston, a writer employed by the American Museum of Natural History. Author and editor bonded while working together on the nonfiction book Dinosaurs in the Attic; and when the project ended, Preston treated Child to a private midnight tour of the AMNH. The excursion proved fateful: Exploring the deserted corridors and darkened nooks and crannies of the museum, Child turned to Preston and said, "This would make the perfect setting for a thriller!" Although the book would not see print until 1995, the idea for Relic was born that night, cementing a friendship and launching a unique cross-country writing partnership.
Child left St. Martin's in 1987 to went to work for MetLife as a systems analyst. Shortly after the publication of Relic, he resigned his position to become a full-time writer. Subsequent collaborations with Preston have produced an intriguing string of interconnected novels that are less a series than what the authors call a "pangea." The books are self-contained, but the stories take place in the same universe and they share events and characters -- including many introduced in Relic. Readers obviously enjoy this cross-pollination, since the Preston-Child thrillers turn up regularly on the bestseller charts.
In 2002, Child released his first solo novel, Utopia, the story of a futuristic amusement park held hostage by a group of techno-terrorists. Other solo works have followed, blending cutting-edge science and high-octane thrills. Preston, too, has produced fiction and nonfiction on his own, and the two men continue their successful collaborations. It's an arrangement that suits both writers to a tee.
While at St. Martin's, Lincoln Child assembled several collections of ghost and horror stories. He also founded the company's mass-market horror division.
On his website, Child lists the following among his interests: pre-1950s literature and poetry; post-1950s popular fiction; playing the piano, various MIDI instruments, and the 5-string banjo; English and American history; motorcycles; architecture; classical music, early jazz, blues, and R&B; exotic parrots; esoteric programming languages; mountain hiking; bow ties; Italian suits; fedoras; archaeology; and multiplayer deathmatching.
In our interview Child shared some fun and fascinating personal anecdotes.
"I try to write about things, places, events, and phenomena I know about personally. That helps make the novels more genuine. My grandmother, Nora Kubie, who was herself a published novelist, always gave me that advice. And it's probably the best I've received, or for that matter given. I even try to make use of my personal eccentricities and quirks. I hate subways, for example, and in such works as Reliquary I tried to instill -- or at least convey -- that groundless but persistent fear."
"My first job out of college was as an editorial assistant in a New York publishing house. Being an editorial assistant is the purgatory would-be editors must endure before they can ascend the ladder and begin acquiring books on their own. I spent a year filing paperwork, writing copy, and typing rejection letters."
"For me, writing never gets easier. It's always hard work. It doesn't matter how many words you wrote the day before, or how many novels you've completed in the last decade: every day you start fresh again with that same blank page, or that same blank screen. As long as the work, and the finished product, remains fresh and important to a writer -- and the day it stops being important to me is the day I'll lay down my pen -- said writer can never allow himself to coast, or go soft, or recycle old material, or take the easy way out."
"I like exotic parrots, motorcycles, wine from Pauillac, playing the piano and the banjo, the poetry of John Keats, the music of Fats Waller, collecting old books and new guitars, computer FPS and RPG games, and preparing dishes like caneton a l'Orange and desserts like soufflé au chocolat."
What was the book that most influenced your life or your career as a writer?
Probably the essays of E. B. White. Nobody has influenced my love for words and wordplay as much as White has. In his hands, essays become poetry, and poetry becomes music. I've wanted to be a writer from a very young age, but it was such essays in this book as "Farewell, My Lovely!'" and "Death of a Pig" and "Here Is New York" that fueled my resolve, kept me determined despite setbacks and wrong turns, and ultimately helped turn a fond dream into reality.
What are your favorite books, and what makes them special to you?
This is hard. Ask me tomorrow, and you'd probably get some different titles. But these are the ones that spring immediately to mind:
What are some of your favorite films?
I love everything from drawing-room comedies to modern thrillers to art-house films. My favorites include, in no particular order:
What types of music do you like? Is there any particular kind you like to listen to when you're writing?
I love many types of music: classical music, R&B, soul, rock, bluegrass, jazz. Of the last five categories, I'm particularly partial to music composed and performed between 1940 and 1970. I can't listen to music while writing -- any such distraction would have dreadful consequences.
If you had a book club, what would it be reading?
Probably great works of English, Russian, and French literature. There are still many important novels in the canon that have to date eluded me -- the formal structure of a book club would help give me the discipline necessary to pick them up at last.
What are your favorite kinds of books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
I'm very hard to buy for. As a collector, my favorite books to receive are obviously collectible titles: rare first editions, very old books, and the like.
As for giving books to others, any book that has had a profound effect on me, or that I think the recipient will truly enjoy, is a delight to pass on or recommend. I recently gave Doug a copy of Kenneth Roberts's Northwest Passage, and it helped him get through a grueling period of touring in support of our latest joint book. I think most readers would agree that recommending books to people can be almost as rewarding as discovering the book for yourself.
Do you have any special writing rituals? For example, what do you have on your desk when you're writing?
My desk is cluttered with computers, phones, fax machines, printers, network storage devices, keyboards, and flat panel displays -- all sorts of technological flotsam and jetsam.
As for writing rituals, I find that late morning through early afternoon is the best time for me to do creative writing. I can only do so many hours of that per day, however, both from standpoints of creative energy and simple logistics: there are numerous other chores that demand a writer's time, such as answering email, doing publicity....
Many writers are hardly "overnight success" stories. How long did it take for you to get where you are today? Any rejection-slip horror stories or inspirational anecdotes?
As a former book editor, I had contacts in the industry among agents and publishers. That guaranteed that our first novel, Relic, would at least be given a sympathetic reading -- but it certainly didn't guarantee success. Our agent showed that manuscript to a long, long list of publishers over many months, and he was very patient, keeping hope alive when both Doug Preston and I began to despair of the book ever being published. In the end, Tor Books took a chance on us.
What tips or advice do you have for writers still looking to be discovered?
Be patient, and have fun -- it sounds like a truism, but the act of writing should be, in part, its own reward. Doug and I tried to have fun while we wrote Relic, and we also tried hard to make it the kind of book that we ourselves would like to read. Readers are very intelligent people, and they are quick to spot the difference between a book that was written with the genuine intent of pleasing the author and his/her readers, and a book written with the cynical intention of simply selling a lot of copies.
Lewis and Lindsay Thorpe were the perfect couple: young, attractive, and ideally matched. But the veil of perfection can mask many blemishes. When the Thorpes are found dead in their tasteful Flagstaff living room (having committed double suicide), alarms go off in the towering Manhattan offices of Eden Incorporated, the high-tech matchmaking company whose spectacular success, and legendary secrecy, has inspired awe around the world. The Thorpes, few people knew, were more than the quintessential happy couple – they were Eden’s first perfect match.
A short time later, Christopher Lash, a gifted former FBI forensic psychologist, receives an urgent plea from Eden to perform a quick – and quiet – investigation into the deaths. Lash’s psychological autopsy reveals nothing suspicious, but inadvertently dredges up the memories of a searing personal tragedy he has kept at bay for years.
The situation changes suddenly when a second Eden couple is found dead -- by all appearances, another double suicide. Now Eden – particularly Richard Silver, the company’s brilliant and reclusive founder – has no choice but to grant Lash unprecedented access to its most guarded secrets if he is to have any chance of determining what is going wrong. The hidden world he discovers is a stunning labyrinth of artificial intelligence, creative genius, and a melding of technology that does indeed, to Lash’s surprise, deliver on Eden’s promise to its clients: the guarantee of a perfect, lifelong mate. But Lash’s involvement in the investigation becomes more personal and dangerous than he could haveimagined, nearly as soon as it begins.
With tremendous imagination and skill, master thriller-writer Lincoln Child renders a setting too frighteningly believable not to be real. Infused with relentless suspense and a riveting pace, DEATH MATCH is Child at his best.
Child's story, while quite ingenious, contains echoes of other stories we all know, from "Frankenstein" to "1984" to "The Stepford Wives" to every mad scientist B-movie we saw as kids...."Death Match" should be a popular beach book this summer because it is slick, sophisticated entertainment, as well as a cautionary tale about artificial intelligence. But the novel is also derivative, uneven and burdened with too much high-tech mumbo jumbo about "avatars" and "computational hyperspace" and "basal compatibilities." Worst of all, it turns out that Liza can't really produce a perfect marriage. If you want one of those, you still have to trust in dumb luck.
Child's work as both solo author (Utopia) and with Douglas Preston (Relic; Still Life with Crows; etc.) always features concepts so high they threaten readers with nosebleeds. Eden, a computerized matchmaking corporation, promises clients who pay a $25,000 fee and pass strict psychological and physical testing that they will receive not just a date but a perfect romantic match, a soul mate with a lifetime money back guarantee. All of the couples brought together are blissfully happy; in the company's history no one has ever asked for a refund. The moving force behind Eden is a supercomputer named Liza and her designer, the brilliant, reclusive Richard Silver. Liza compares one million variables in its process, and those candidates with a 95% match rate are declared ideal mates. Six couples out of the 624,000 people who have gone through the program have had all million variables perfectly aligned, creating what Eden calls "Supercouples." But one of the supercouples has inexplicably committed double suicide. Dr. Christopher Lash, a psychologist specializing in marital relationships, is called in to discover what has gone horribly wrong. Within a week, a second supercouple have also killed themselves. Lash works with security technician Tara Stapleton to investigate some of the individuals rejected by Eden. At the end of the book Lash is in serious trouble, and the entire Eden house of cards is beginning to collapse. As in all of Child's work, there is plenty of interesting cutting-edge science and, in this case, psychiatric and computer lore. Most thriller veterans will know from almost the beginning who is behind the suicides of the supercouples, but putting it all together makes for an entertaining read. (May) Forecast: An intriguing premise, lots of fascinating science, a broad fan base and excellent film prospects add up to happy sales. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
For $25,000, people can find their perfect romantic partner thanks to a state-of-the-art operation known as Eden. Its founder, a reclusive computer scientist, has created "LIZA," a supercomputer capable of tapping into any records and files in her search to provide the "perfect match." When some of the couples begin dying under mysterious circumstances, former FBI agent Christopher Lash is called in to discover the cause. It's against this technical background that Child has set his latest suspenseful psychological thriller and proves once again that he is a master at building tension to a fever pitch. Narrator Barrett Whitener brings his considerable skills into play by sharply defining each major character and by maintaining a high level of menace and danger. A first-class thriller that deserves a spot in the audio collection of most libraries.-Joseph L. Carlson, Allan Hancock Coll., Lompoc, CA Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Second solo work by Child, who writes mighty thrillers with Douglas Preston (Still Life with Crows, 2003, etc.). The genius-touched Child writes paragraphs of polymathic detail of the kind seen most often in the novels of Richard Powers. As in his first solo flight, Utopia (2002), he again creates a gifted person who loves his toys. In Utopia, the entertainment genius Eric Nightingale created a Disneyesque theme park featuring four worlds: Gaslight, Camelot, Callisto (space age stuff), and Boardwalk. This time around, the lonely computer brain Richard Silver creates Liza (as in Shaw's Pygmalion), a fabulous artificial intelligence construct that can teach itself to think with ever increasing speed, depth, and sensitivity. Then Silver decides to devote Liza to resolving problems of human happiness, particularly in mating choices, and he erects, in Manhattan, the amazing building named Eden, Inc., where for $25,000 a person can be scanned genetically, psychologically, and otherwise for the perfect mate. In the four years of Eden's huge success, no ill match has asked for its money back. All clients, like Stepford wives, remain perfectly mated-some more perfectly than others. These superperfect matings, of which Eden has produced six, are called supercouples. But now something terrible has been happening to them: two of the six pairs have committed suicide. Eden, Inc., calls in Dr. Christopher Lash (author of Congruency), a psychologist specializing in marital relationships who's also a burned-out and retired forensic psychologist with the FBI Behavioral Science team working out of Quantico. Lash has to dig into the deep guts of Liza to find a reason for the suicides-but all he comes to arecloudless dead ends with supremely happy couples smiling at him. Finally, Lash himself must go through Eden's screening process to understand how it works, and, although he's turned down as a client, Liza nonetheless finds his perfect mate. And the, well, murderer? Big surprise. Terrific writing-though the climax, overly spun out, sticks to thriller format. Agent: Eric Simonoff/Janklow & Nesbit
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