Praise for Head On
"New and fresh....Scalzi's smirking, impish voice is a nice touch." —NPR
"Particularly relevant....A fun, breezy thriller, one that showcases a world that carries with it some extremely astute commentary on some of the real problems that we face in our own. " —The Verge
"The Lock In universe is as fascinating as ever....Complex, expansive....Pretty damn cool." —RT Book Reviews, 4 stars
"Head On doesn’t care if you’ve read Lock In or not, but it does care if you enjoy a mystery wrapped up inside a science fiction novel....This might even be one of the best introductions to Scalzi out there." —Culturess
"[Scalzi's] prose flows like a river, smoothly carrying us through the story; his characters are beautifully crafted; and his future world is impeccably designed, at the same time wildly imaginative and wholly plausible." —Booklist, starred review
"This taut mystery, filled with memorable characters in a well-constructed world, will keep readers on the edges of their seats." —Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Readers will definitely show up for the witty banter and smartass takedowns….Very clever, wonderfully satisfying fun." —Kirkus
"A snappy, cannily-driven police procedural in which Scalzi highlights and skewers contemporary issues and hypocrisies." —The Seattle Review of Books
"Scalzi is in good form again here with his usual rich blend of smart, rapid-fire dialogue and well-paced bursts of hard-hitting action." —Toronto Star
Praise for Lock In
"This is the kind of thriller that Michael Crichton, Lincoln Child, and James Rollins do so well. Add John Scalzi to that list." —Douglas Preston, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Kraken Project and Impact
"As much as Scalzi has the scientific creativity of a Michael Crichton, he also has the procedural chops of a Stephen J. Canell to craft a whodunit with buddy-cop charm and suspects aplenty—most of them in someone else's body." —USA Today
“Satisfying.” —NPR
“Scalzi takes his work to an entirely new level.” —Cory Doctorow
“A smart, thoughtful near-future thriller…. This powerful novel will intrigue and entertain both fans and newcomers.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review
“John Scalzi may be the most entertaining writer in SF today.” —Toronto Star
2018-02-06
The long-awaited second in a series (Lock In, 2014) that explores disability politics within the context of a near-future techno-thriller.FBI Agent Chris Shane (gender carefully unspecified by the author) is a Haden, a survivor of a devastating meningitislike disease that has left them "locked inside" their body, able to interact with others only virtually or via sophisticated robots known as "threeps." Chris and their partner, senior Agent Leslie Vann, investigate scandal and foul play in the world of Hilketa, a violent sport played by Haden-piloted threeps in which the objective is to tear the head off a designated threep and carry it to the goal. Promising player Duane Chapman inexplicably dies during a game intended to recruit new investors for the sport, and a league official who attempts to hide data about the suspicious incident commits suicide soon after. Labeling Chapman's death a murder, Shane and Vann follow a trail obscured by arson, kinky affairs, FBI mishandling, threep attacks, and slimy lawyers to a scheme concerning Hilketa's shady (and shaky) financing. As in the previous installment, the villain is obvious halfway through; the true puzzle is figuring out the details of and the motivations behind the complex plot. There is plenty of trenchant commentary on disability rights, prejudice against minorities, and the ways in which plutocrats take advantage of government funding. Readers will definitely show up for the witty banter and smartass takedowns Scalzi (The Collapsing Empire, 2017, etc.) liberally sprinkles through all his novels. They may be less amused at Scalzi's running joke about the way Chris' threeps are always being destroyed, reminiscent of how Stephanie Plum's cars are always exploding in Janet Evanovich's novels; this sort of mild physical humor gets tired quickly. There's also a vital clue that's somewhat too reminiscent of a plot point in Men in Black.Very clever, wonderfully satisfying fun.