Back in July, I reviewed the 3rd
volume in the Q.E.D.
series, created by Motohiro
Katou, which comprised of two excellent, well-balanced
novella-length stories that fleshed out some of main-characters and
gave the reader a classic, puzzle-oriented detective story – set in
an abandoned star observatory on a lonely, snow-capped mountain peak.
I ended my review with the half-promise to read the next two volumes
in the weeks ahead, but, as you probably noticed, it's 2020 now. And
no further reviews have materialized over the past six months.
So, as my belated New Year's
resolution, I intend to get as close to volume 10 as possible before
end of the year, because I really like Q.E.D. Even though I
can't quite put my finger on what exactly intrigues me about series.
The fourth volume of Q.E.D.
opens with "1st, April, 1999," a story demonstrating the
difference between Q.E.D. and Case
Closed, Detective
Academy Q or The
Kindaichi Case Files, focusing on a scam coinciding with an
April Fool's Lying Tournament. Curiously, the scam has a slight hint
of Ruritania!
Sou Touma is the 16-year-old
protagonist, a boy genius and former MIT graduate student, who won
the 1998 April Fool Club's annual contest "to see who can tell
the best lie or pull the best prank," but now he has to
participate again to defend his title – or else "everyone will
be mad." Particularly, the club member who came in second, Miss
Gria Elenoar. A second plot-thread is introduced when Touma meets an
old acquaintance from his days as an MIT student, Cliff Bhaum, who's
Vice-Minister, of Foreign Affairs, of a developing nation, the
Kingdom of Clavius. Bhaum is in Japan to entice a group of greedy
businessman, who have preyed on his country before, to reinvest a big
sum of money and resources into Clavius. But this time, the offer is
actually a baited trap. Touma's energetic, plucky school friend, Kana
Mizuhara, convinces him to help Bhaum.
Bhaum approaches the group of
businessmen, representing D Corporation, with an unappealing, hardly
profitable offer to invest in the development of an iron ore mine,
but a simple remark gave them second thoughts. When the meeting
ended, Bhaum regrettably remarked that "the Japanese are not
willing to research "The Fossil" together."
The fossil in question is a tiny,
magnetic stone that only has a southern pole. A compass placed on any
side of the stone will always "point towards the south
direction," which means the stone is made up of monopole
particles that, until now, had been purely hypothetical and referred
to as fossil particles – as they are considered "a remnant of
the beginning of the universe." A discovery that would grant
humanity access to "large amounts of energy" and "fame
and fortune to the one who finds it."
So you can probably see where this
story is going. It's classic con/scam story in which greedy people
want to get something for practically nothing and are given
practically nothing for something, but don't expect any rug-pulling
or surprising reversals that cast the story in an entirely different
late. What you see, is what you get. "1st, April, 1999," is a
minor, but amusing, story that handily brought two very different
plot-threads together in a satisfactory way. The ending was a nice,
gentle touch to the characterization of Touma and Mizuhara.
A note for the curious: Mizuhara gives
the businessman a demonstration of the monopole stone with a magnet,
which you can classify as a quasi-impossible problem, but I can
already feel JJ judging
me.
The second story, "Jacob's Ladder,"
sees the return of two characters, Eva and Loki, who previously
appeared in "Breakthrough" from the third volume, but what makes
this story an interesting curiosity is that it's basically a
techno-thriller with hints of a locked room mystery inside a
computer-rendered environment! The story is obviously a product of
its time.
Touma and Mizuhara are in the downtown
area of Tokyo when all of the traffic lights go haywire, paralyzing
part of the city with "large-scale traffic jams and train
delays" due "to accidents," which ended with 58
injuries and no clear explanation given – suggesting to Touma that "the government is just trying to hush things up." A
suspicion that is confirmed when Loki returns to Japan with the news
that Eva has been arrested by the CIA in connection with the incident
in downtown Tokyo.
Eva is the manager of the Artificial
Life lab, at MIT, where they were researching "Artificial Life
in computers" and the crash of the traffic control systems was
caused by her A.I. But how did it get out? The computers in MIT's
laboratory are separated from external connections by "a barrier
called a firewall." So how did the A.I. bypass the firewall and
ended up on a Japanese server, where it connected with the internet,
to wreak havoc on the traffic control system? A second incident shows
the threat is spreading with the potential to "crash all the
computers in the world." A potential crisis that was on
everyone's mind at the time the story was published.
This volume was originally published
in September 10, 1999, when many people feared the "Millennium
Bug," or Y2K, would crash the computerized world upon the rollover
from '99 to '00, which makes the year 2000 indistinguishable from
1900 to computers – potentially setting humanity back to the
pre-industrialist age. Touma, Mizuhara and Loki have to try to
prevent this in order to clear Eva's, which provides the story with a
technically fascinating, possibly unique problem. What makes a "clan"
of artificially intelligent units tick? Why did this stable,
harmonious and peaceful artificially-rendered world ended in an
all-out war of aggression? Can an answer be found in one of the four
core commands that the units have to obey, no matter what? A set of
rules comparable Isaac Asimov's The Three Laws of Robotics. Just not
used as fairly as in Asimov's masterpiece, The
Caves of Steel (1954).
"Jacob's Ladder" is a
techno-thriller mystery story with a ton of plot exposition,
explaining all the technical background details to the reader, but
the story has a surprisingly depressing ending that humanized "computer programs bound by a set of rules" – steeped in
biblical imagery. So, a story with an interesting and even original
idea, but the temptation to relay on the "secret passages"
(hacking) of detective stories/plot-threads centering on computers
killed it as a fair play mystery. Sadly, the reason why the
blocked-by-firewall mystery didn't turn into a one-of-a-kind
impossible crime. I still sort of liked it though.
On a whole, I don't think the fourth
volume was as strong as the previous one with two stories that had
better premises than solutions, but, in spite of their imperfections,
I quite enjoyed reading them. So you can expect a review of the next
volume by springtime (let's start slowly).
Good luck with your resolutions. When you get to the 10th volume, I suggest to also read the second half of the 12th volume as a set because they are linked. Looking forward to the next one. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteWhy is there is a gap of one and a half volumes between the stories from volume 10 and 12?
DeleteI reviewed those volumes a while back too, but as mentioned below, they're seperate cases, but the volume 12 story deals with what happened to the characters of the volume 10 story afterwards, so it's a direct sequel.
DeleteWasn't much a fan of the stories in Q.E.D. volume 4 myself. You probably know I'm just picking my Q.E.D. stories now and reading the edited anthologies, but I'll be keeping an eye on your reviews to make sure I don't miss some hidden gem ;)
This time, you don't have to wait 6-12 months to find out. :)
DeleteYes, the second half of volume 12 is actually the aftermath of volume 10. They are actually two different cases, but the case in volume 12 happened because of volume 10. They are the only two stories which deviate from the usual two stories/ volume in the Q.E.D. series. I especially enjoyed volume 10, and look forward to your review of that volume.
ReplyDeleteGoddammit! Now I've to do two volumes at a time to get to 12 before the end of the year.
Delete