Dry Absurdism And Great Humanity

Veilpiercer received a starred review from IndieReader. I don’t know the reviewer but it’s obvious he is insightful and charming and probably handsome and much sought after. He says nice things like this:


“With both dry absurdism and great humanity, Bruce Berls’s VEILPIERCER successfully turns 21st-century concerns about technology and society into a rollicking vision of their looming consequences. . . . Thoughtful and sharp, VEILPIERCER is perfect for any sci-fi reader with concern for the present and hope for the future.”


Isn’t that lovely? You’re probably thinking, “Gosh, I hadn’t realized it was rollicking, I have to read Veilpiercer right away.” And you’re right! It’s fast and it’s funny and it’s kind of cheap.

Not convinced? Take ten minutes to listen to a podcast conversation about Veilpiercer. The podcasters describe the book’s focus on the single minded pursuit of power and profit, which makes it sound serious and thoughtful. Which I totally intended! You bet! But remember, there’s also a mob wearing squid hats and tinfoil helmets whispering about lizard people. The serious themes are hidden under pretty deep layers of silliness, that’s all I’m saying.

Call in sick to work, blow off that school deadline, put off that pesky medical appointment, and read Veilpiercer today.

Here’s the IndieReader review. I’m pretty sure it will instill a burning desire to read the book. If the burning persists, you might want to get that medical appointment rescheduled. And if you read Veilpiercer, leave your own review or at least splash some stars on Amazon. It helps more than you know.

“Once an internet conspiracy theorist and briefly an anti-corporate activist, Cabalynne now goes from temp job to temp job just hoping to buy groceries and pay rent. Arrgle, the mega-corporation insidiously controlling more and more of the world, continues expanding despite spirited protest. But when Cabalynne learns that Arrgle’s augmented-reality technology will soon entirely hide the world of the ultra-rich from the eyes of the poor—and that the poor will be hidden from the ultra-rich, too—she can’t help but return to the fight.

“Bruce Berls’s VEILPIERCER is a fast-paced sci-fi adventure with timely social concerns. As in the best speculative fiction, much of the world of VEILPIERCER feels familiar; people have neurological implants instead of handheld devices, but the prevalence of surveillance capitalism is just one or two steps greater than it is today. Misinformation and conspiratorial thinking are omnipresent, mostly as tools for corporations to distract the general public from their malfeasance. Technologies that could be put to the benefit of all humankind are instead reserved for the pleasure and profit of a select few. This makes VEILPIERCER darkly funny, but, more importantly, relatable. Whatever Cabalynne and her activist team get up to with incomprehensible tech (including an increasingly sentient AI companion), almost any reader will appreciate feeling economic precarity while capitalists enjoy a blithe, rarefied existence.

“Though the subject matter is dark, the fast pace and light tone keep the narrative moving. VEILPIERCER nails the humor of a surprise at the end of a well-constructed list: a haggard Cabalynne must wait for all the airplane boarding groups before her, including “Platinum, Diamond, Gold, Elite, Special, Premier, Red Carpet, Shag Carpet, Economy, Basic, and Single-Ply.” Arrgle CEO Lexi Xenos has a palatial home like the unholy love child of “a French mansion, a Japanese temple, and a Cheesecake Factory.” The supple prose is also rich and effective in quieter moments: Cabalynne thinks fondly of the “comforting gauze” of online conspiracy forums she used to frequent; and when the protagonists are briefly imprisoned by organized criminals, they find themselves in a capacious old hangar where “carcasses of partially disassembled airport shuttles scattered around the floor like dinosaur bones.” The flexible narrative voice keeps the plot moving, the characters sympathetic, and the world appealingly tangible—an especially crucial quality in a story that fixates on the distinction between the “real” world and the high-tech decorations used to obscure it.

“Thoughtful and sharp, VEILPIERCER is perfect for any sci-fi reader with concern for the present and hope for the future.

“With both dry absurdism and great humanity, Bruce Berls’s VEILPIERCER successfully turns 21st-century concerns about technology and society into a rollicking vision of their looming consequences.”

IndieReader, September 6, 2024