Freedom Book of the Month for December, 2001:
The American Zone
by L. Neil Smith, Tor 2001, hardcover, 350 pp., $27.95
You don't need to imagine a terrorist attack on an unprecedented scale: a deadly assault on one of the world's largest and busiest buildings, wreaking havoc and taking an unthinkable toll in human life.
You don't need to imagine the reaction to such an attack: the outcry for security. The demand for a government powerful and omnipresent enough to track down the perpetrators and prevent future attacks. The fear and loathing of an entire class of people perceived of as being involved in, or at least approving of, the attacks and the attackers.
But imagine a novel about this scenario. A novel written before September 11th, 2001. That novel is The American Zone.
The American Zone is the latest addition to L. Neil Smith's "North American Confederacy" series, and quite possibly the best since The Probability Broach, his debut novel. Set in a universe where the Whiskey Rebellion succeeded and a near-anarchist society, instead of what we know as the United States, flung itself across the continent, the North American Confederacy books have been a mainstay of libertarian science fiction for two decades.
Although not released until after the September 11th attacks, the book was written long before them, and knowing this makes it an eerily prescient read. Like many of the NAC titles, The American Zone follows events in the life of detective Win Bear, the first human being to migrate to the North American Confederacy from "our" world via Ooloorie Eckickeck P'wheet's "probability broach" gateway.
The cast that Smith fans have grown to love -- Bear and his wife Clarissa, centenarian-and-then-some anarchist fireplug Lucille Kropotkin, even the redoubtable chimpanzee cum restaurateur, Mr. Meep -- are faced with the threat of (gasp! gag!) incipient government if they can't determine the origin of the attacks and defuse the growing cries for a central authority to "protect" the people of the North American Confederacy.
As always, Smith raises issues that are current, relevant and difficult. And, as always, he presents unique and ingenius solutions to those issues. The American Zone is the right book at the right time, and it makes one wonder if the guy might not have a crystal ball or a really good deck of tarot cards or something. The more likely explanation is that he has a great sense of the likely, perhaps inevitable, consequences of events -- and that he's able to get that sense down on paper in manner that's both highly entertaining and intellectually provocative.
[Disclaimer: Thomas L. Knapp, the author of this review, is involved in an effort to draft L. Neil Smith as the 2004 presidential candidate of the Libertarian Party. He believes that the readers of the review have the right to know this so as to assess the effect such involvement might have on his objectivity.]
Order The American Zone from Laissez Faire for $27.95.
Order the new trade paperback edition of The Probability Broach from Laissez Faire for $15.95.
Visit L. Neil Smith's Webley Page.
Read reviews of other L. Neil Smith titles:
Forge of the Elders, Free-Market.Net's 2000 Freedom Book of the Year:
The Mitzvah (with Aaron Zelman), Freedom Book of the Month, July 1999:
Hope (with Aaron Zelman), Freedom Book of the Month, August 2001:
Lever Action, Freedom Book of the Month, May 2001:
edited by Thomas L. Knapp
October 2001: Junk Science Judo by Steven J. Milloy.
September 2001: Jonathan Gullible by Ken Schoolland.
August 2001: Hope by L. Neil Smith and Aaron Zelman
July 2001: Dissenting Electorate edited by Wendy McElroy and Carl Watner
June 2001: Tethered Citizens by Sheldon Richman
May 2001: Lever Action by L. Neil Smith
April 2001: The Cato Handbook for Congressfrom the Cato Institute
March 2001: The Contested Legacy of Ayn Rand by David Kelley
February 2001: Crypto by Steven Levy
January 2001: Total Freedom by Chris Matthew Sciabarra
Freedom Book of the Year 2000: Forge of the Elders by L. Neil Smith
December 2000: The Mystery of Capital by Hernando de Soto
November 2000: Escape from Leviathan by J.C. Lester
October 2000: The Art of Political War by David Horowitz
September 2000: An Enemy of the State by Justin Raimondo
August 2000: The Triumph of Liberty by Jim Powell
July 2000: A Generation Divided by Rebecca Klatch
June 2000: Law's Order by David Friedman
May 2000: Forge of the Elders by L. Neil Smith
April 2000: Reciprocia by Richard G. Rieben
March 2000: The Art of Fiction: A Guide for Writers and Readers by Ayn Rand
February 2000: Addiction is a Choice by Jeffrey A. Schaler
January 2000: Revolutionary Language by David C. Calderwood
Special December 1999 Feature: The Freedom Book of the Year: Send in the Waco Killers: Essays on the Freedom Movement, 1993-1998 by Vin Suprynowicz
November 1999: Conquests and Cultures by Thomas Sowell
October 1999: A Way To Be Free by Robert LeFevre, edited by Wendy McElroy
September 1999: Assassins (Left Behind) by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins
August 1999: Don't Shoot the Bastards (Yet): 101 More Ways to Salvage Freedom by Claire Wolfe
July 1999: The Mitzvah by L. Neil Smith and Aaron Zelman
June 1999: The Incredible Bread Machine by R.W. Grant
May 1999: Send in the Waco Killers by Vin Suprynowicz
April 1999: It Still Begins with Ayn Rand by Jerome Tuccille
March 1999: The Dictionary of Free-Market Economics by Fred Foldvary
February 1999: Feminist Interpretations of Ayn Rand edited by Mimi Reisel Gladstein and Chris Matthew Sciabarra
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