- Beck, Glenn with Jack Henderson.
The Eye of Moloch.
New York: Threshold Editions, 2013.
ISBN 978-1-4516-3584-3.
-
I have a terrible record of reading a book, saying I don't intend to
read the inevitable sequel, and then once again, finding my
bandaged
finger wabbling back to the Fire. This novel is a sequel to
The Overton Window (June 2010)
which I found to be a respectable but less than gripping thriller
with an unsatisfying conclusion. The present volume continues the story,
but still leaves much up in the air at its end. As a sequel to
The Overton Window, it assumes the reader has previously
read that book; little or no effort is made to bring readers who
start here up to speed, and they will find themselves without any idea
who the principal characters are, the circumstances they find
themselves in, and why they are acting as they do.
The grand plot to use public relations to manipulate the U.S.
population into welcoming the imposition of tyranny by a small
group of insiders is proceeding. Noah Gardner, son of one of the key
players in the conspiracy and former worker in its inner circle, has
switched sides and now supports the small band called Founders'
Keepers, which, led by Molly Ross, strives to bring the message of
the country's founding principles to the citizens before the situation
reaches the state of outright revolt. But the regime views any form
of dissent as a threat, and has escalated the conflict into overt
violence, deploying private contractors, high-tech weapons, and
intrusive and ubiquitous surveillance, so well proven in overseas
wars, against its domestic opponents.
As the U.S. crumbles, fringe groups of all kinds begin to organise
and pursue their own agendas. The conspirators play them against one
another, seeking to let them do the dirty work, while creating an
environment of fear of “domestic terrorists” which
will make the general population welcome the further erosion of liberty.
With the news media completely aligned with the regime and the
Internet beginning to succumb to filtering and censorship, there
seems little hope of getting the truth out to the people.
Molly Ross seizes upon a bold stroke which will expose the extent
to which the central planners intend to deliver Americans into
serfdom. Certainly if Americans were aware of how their every
act was monitored, correlated, and used to control them, they would
rise up. But this requires a complicated plan which puts the resources
of her small group and courageous allies on the line.
Like its predecessor, this book, taken as a pure thriller, doesn't
come up to the standard set by the masters of the genre. There are
many characters with complex back-stories and interactions, and at
times it's difficult to remember who's who and what side they're
currently on. The one thing which is very effective is that
throughout the novel we encounter references to weapons, surveillance
technologies, domestic government programs which trample upon the
rights of citizens, media bias and overt propaganda, and other horrors
which sketch how liberty is shrinking in the face of a centralised,
coercive, and lawless state. Then in the afterword, most of these
programs are documented as already existing in the U.S., complete with
citations to source documents on the Web. But then one wonders: in 2013
the U.S. National Security Agency has been revealed as spying on
U.S. citizens in ways just as extreme as the surveillance Molly hoped
to expose here, and only a small percentage of the population seems to
care.
Perhaps what works best is that the novel evokes a society near that
tipping point where, in the words of
Claire Wolfe,
“It's too late to work within the system, but too early to
shoot the bastards.” We have many novels and manifestos of political turnaround
before liberty is totally lost, and huge stacks of post-apocalyptic
fiction set after the evil and corrupt system has collapsed under its
own weight, but this is one of the few novels you'll read set in that
difficult in-between time. The thing about a tipping point is that
individuals, small groups, and ideas can have a disproportionate influence on
outcomes, whereas near equilibrium the system is difficult to perturb. This
book invites the reader to ask, in a situation as described, which side they
would choose, and what would they do, and risk, for what they believe.
December 2013