Like Calculating God and Illegal Alien, Mindscan is part philosophy novel, part courtroom drama, part thriller. This is a standard Sawyer trick, knitting together a variety of genres in the service of his yarn. An eager advocate for SF (including his recently established science-fiction imprint), Sawyer's books embrace the idea that genre is a way of framing a human story, rather than the whole story in itself.
Mindscan opens with the protagonist facing a fairly typical Sawyer-style crisis: Jake Sullivan is worried that the genetic defect that caused his father's massive, personality-destroying brain injury might strike him. To Jake, it's not a matter of if, but of when. His whole life has been haunted by the possibility that it could be brutally short, or, even worse, long but with him not really there to appreciate it. After all, that's how it's been for his father.
Enter the technological element, a new process that copies the pattern of everything in your brain, then transfers it into a mechanical body. It's you, but without mortality, without even the aches and pains of aging. And, as the technology improves, your dittoed brain can always be put into a faster, better, stronger case. Meanwhile, the original you is sent to a luxurious retirement home on the moon, leaving your simulacrum to take over in every capacity, while you laze away your remaining natural days.
From this premise, Sawyer takes us skimming across a sea of implications. Can you cede your rights to a simulated version of yourself? How does our mortality affect our actions? Who would choose this kind of procedure and why? How would people react to this emerging technology? And what would it be like for a person to leave their body for something far less vulnerable, still carrying the memories of how food tastes, the wind feels, a rose smells?
As you can imagine, both Jake Sullivans face surprises and complications, things they didn't foresee, but perhaps should have. The battles are internal and external, and Sawyer provides a real overview of what this feasible-sounding technology could do. In fact, even in the book, the technology is something that works, but is not quite understood, even by the scientists who developed the process.






Article comments
1 - Natalie Bennett
This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!