The Labyrinth Index
Written by Charles Stross
Narrated by Bianca Amato
4/5
()
About this audiobook
Charles Stross
CHARLES STROSS (he/him) is a full-time science fiction writer and resident of Edinburgh, Scotland. He has won three Hugo Awards for Best Novella, including for the Laundry Files tale “Equoid.” His work has been translated into over twelve languages. His novels include the bestselling Merchant Princes series, the Laundry series (including Locus Award finalist The Dilirium Brief), and several stand-alones including Glasshouse, Accelerando, and Saturn's Children. Like many writers, Stross has had a variety of careers, occupations, and job-shaped catastrophes, from pharmacist (he quit after the second police stakeout) to first code monkey on the team of a successful dot-com startup (with brilliant timing, he tried to change employers just as the bubble burst) to technical writer and prolific journalist covering the IT industry. Along the way he collected degrees in pharmacy and computer science, making him the world’s first officially qualified cyberpunk writer.
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Titles in the series (12)
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Reviews for The Labyrinth Index
128 ratings8 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5If it wasn't narrated by Bianca Amato, who is amazing, I wouldn't have finished it. The book has far too many technical terms in it and focuses too much on the mechanics of the scenes. The author TELLS you what's going on but doesn't SHOW you. I never felt like I was living inside the book.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5With the aftermath of the previous book firmly in place, Mhari is the main POV and the story uses lots of flashbacks using the personal diary of Mhari instead of her professional one. The main mission in this one is to save the President of the USA. The Sleeper is taking over America and through magic has made people forget the third branch of government. The Black Pharaoh isn’t doing this for kindness but more to negate the power grab of one of his enemies. Mhari puts together a small team to go to the USA and capture him. Several members of the team are past minor characters of previous books so it was nice to see them again. Bob gets one scene in the book and Mo is just name checked. The story was good but for the most part there really isn’t a good guy you are rooting for anymore in the series.
Digital review copy provided by the publisher through NetGalley - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I rather like the balance of day-to-day life contrasted with the gibbering horrors of the other realms in the earlier books in this series, but that is pretty much gone and there are ever so few touchstones of normalcy in this version, which is a real loss. It's got the dark humor and the fast pace, but it's all mechanics now.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5compulsively readable, like all The Laundry series (here The Laundry itself has been disbanded, though many of its denizens are still around, and its arcane bureaucracy has of course itself survived the cut). most of the plot takes the occult spooks to America, where the President has been unaccountably forgotten. very funny, and it moves very fast. in these near-future novels, the espionage novel meets cyberpunk means Lovecraftian horror; it's all about high-tech magic and sometimes even elves, so throw fantasy into the mix too. if you've never read this series, why not?
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Pushed the series plot forward, but only by a single click of the cog. Did the previous books have a similar lurid focus on sex acts? I'll have to keep that in mind as I reread. It's been a while since I've read the previous books.It seems to be easier and easier for people to become (this world's verson of) vampires. Like, literally 25% of the characters in this book ended up there.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Told from Mhari the vampire’s semi-omniscient POV (she consults seers), the story picks up with the British government in thrall to the Black Pharaoh. Mhari and other politically wobbly operatives are sent to the US to find the President, since almost the entire country has forgotten him due to a geas cast by the American occult spy agency, which would rather have Cthulhu in charge. And that’s just part of it. I can see why Stross might want to end the series—he has rather written himself into a corner, or rather into an insane geometry now that the stars have come right—but I’d read more.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5With this installment in Stross' long-running series of occult-intelligence thrillers we are now in full-fledged "Nightmare Green" territory with the action focused in Mhari Miller (now Baroness Karnstein). In the wake of the decapitation of the previous British government Fabian Everyman, aka The Mandate, aka N'yar Lat-Hotep, is now the "New Management" and Mhari has been given the dirty job of finding out just what the hell is happening in the United States, which apparently has its own version of "New Management" in power; at least that's the official explanation. This could merely be a throwaway cover to get rid of some people who are no longer useful to the powers that be. If you've been following Stross up until this point you'll certainly want to read this novel otherwise go back to the start; those who have been reading from the start will be wondering what is the meaning of the hornet-like creature on the American cover package...it's probably nothing.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Stross returns to the roots of the Laundry Files here: the previous few books had moved away from the original espionage themes, but in this book they are back with a vengeance: insertion of clandestine agents into enemy territory with an active -- not merely information-gathering -- remit. However, this is no Longer the Bondian storytelling of The Jennifer Morgue where one could cheer for the Laundry in relatively good conscience. This is firmly in the shades of grey territory where the best thing that can be said for the narrator is that she serves a lesser evil: which isn't saying much when the greater evil in question is Cthulhu. As an installment of the Case Nightmare Green arc, this provides far more context to just how much trouble the world is in: the Black Chamber isn't the only threat on the horizon, and the Mandate's plans for the future aren't very pleasant, either.
Mhari is an effective narrator for this stage of the series arc. She's probably less self-deceiving than any of the previous narrators -- she has to deal with the implications of her current state in such a way that anything other than very short-tern self-deception is very, very difficult -- but also has less expertise than, say, Bob or Mo, so her perspective is more limited.
This is the third spec fic book in two months of which the author has indicated, in one way or the other, that it's a response to Trumpian America. (The others, for reference, are Steven Erikson's Rejoice, a Knife to the Heart and Miles Cameron's Cold Iron.) Stross manages to set up an America which is actually worse than the current reality, and a different kind of crisis, but he still highlights, thematically, the way in which the US has a quasi-monarchical focus on the Presidency, not merely in a constitutional sense, but in terms of the social and emotional response of Americans to the office.
As always, this is well-written, worth picking up for anyone reading the series, and a good example of how to blend black humour with an otherwise very dark story to make it readable and enjoyable.