Babylon Babies

Babylon Babies

by Maurice G. Dantec

Narrated by Joe Barrett

Unabridged — 19 hours, 36 minutes

Babylon Babies

Babylon Babies

by Maurice G. Dantec

Narrated by Joe Barrett

Unabridged — 19 hours, 36 minutes

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Overview

Set in the hidden breeding grounds of the first cyborg communities, Dantec's science fiction thriller mixes metaphysics with cyberpunk post-humanism in the spirit of Philip K. Dick.

Toorop, a hard-boiled leatherneck veteran, has been assigned to escort a young woman from Russia to Canada. But Marie is no ordinary girl. A schizophrenic and a possible carrier of a new artificial virus, Marie is bearing a mutant embryo created by an American cult, which dreams of producing a genetically modified messiah that will end all human life as we know it. Moving at breakneck speed, Toorop risks his life to save Marie as her brain, linking to the neuromatrix, surpasses all limits to become the universe itself.

Exploring the symbiosis between organic matter and computer power to spin new forms of consciousness, Babylon Babies rides Nietzsche's prophecy: “Man is something to be overcome.”


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

Explosive and paranoid, this futuristic fable by French sci-fi novelist Dantec explores the frightening ramifications of genetic experimentation. In a constantly shifting world conflict circa 2013, violent-minded (though well-read) Hugo Cornelius Toorop, a 20-year Special Forces veteran of the Bosnian conflict, is offered a lucrative new job by the Siberian mafia in Kazakhstan to transport a young woman to Montreal. Who is Marie Zorn, and what does she carry that is top secret? Armed with new identities and the requisite grenades, Hugo, along with his expert team-the gun-happy Israeli Rebecca Waterman and the hard-core Belfast rebel Dowie-get her to Montreal, where it becomes clear that Marie is a pawn in a vast, pernicious artificial biosphere program and that, moreover, she's pregnant, feared to be carrying an animal clone, and thus contaminated. The nimble, hyperbolic Dantec creates a surreal alternate identity for her on the streets of Quebec through a kind of virtual death. Toorop is pressed by a New Age army of cyborgs (aka Cosmic Dragons) to find Marie and bring her back, and under drug experiments he penetrates the double helix to achieve a surprisingly humanistic conclusion. Riddled with acronyms and pop culture allusions, this is an intense, intellectually labyrinthine ride. (Nov.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

In a near future plagued by wars and other disasters, a mercenary named Thoorop, a veteran of Sarajevo, accepts a commission to transport a young woman named Marie Zorn to Canada from Russia. As the pair travel across Europe to North America, other groups make offers for Marie, and Thoorop realizes that she is no normal woman, but a vessel for a mutant embryo whose hardwired genetic makeup could change the world. A cult hit when first published in France, this savvy sf adventure by the author of The Red Siren features memorable characters, a speedy plot, and a visionary glimpse of a world on the brink of cosmic transformation. Soon to be a movie directed by Mathieu Kassovitz (Gothika), this novel is recommended for larger sf collections. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

From the Publisher

Dantec has created a compelling story with evocative ideas that may prove even more illuminating with subsequent readings, and a reader who undertakes the arduous journey from cover to cover will be rewarded with an entertaining tale.—Arthur Bangs, sffworld.com—

Dantec is a literary revolution.

Science Fiction

Babylon Babies, an under-appreciated novel by French punk rocker turned writer Maurice G. Dantec, deserves a wider audience, and not just because its author is frequently mentioned in the same breath as Michel Houellebecq (and definitely not because the book is being adapted into a movie starring Vin Diesel)... what makes this novel (translated by Noura Wedell) so haunting is its vision of a near future in which society has fractured along every possible national, tribal and sectarian fault line.

New York Times Book Review

Riddled with acronyms and pop culture allusions, this is an intense, intellectually labyrinthine ride.

Publishers Weekly

[T]his novel by Maurice Dantec was an epic ride.

ThickOnline.com

The book deals with the breakdown of community and political certainty. It is gingered with snippets from Dantec's favourite philosophers and loaded with thoughts of his own. The result is a real workout for the reader. Babylon Babies is a vast encyclopedia of the future as seen through a crystal ball with cracks in the glass.... Babylon Babies is part of a genre that makes play with religious ideas. You might call it theo-fiction.

The Sydney Morning Herald

Reviews

The book deals with the breakdown of community and political certainty. It is gingered with snippets from Dantec's favourite philosophers and loaded with thoughts of his own. The result is a real workout for the reader. Babylon Babies is a vast encyclopedia of the future as seen through a crystal ball with cracks in the glass.... Babylon Babies is part of a genre that makes play with religious ideas. You might call it theo-fiction.

The Sydney Morning Herald

The Sydney Morning Herald

The book deals with the breakdown of community and political certainty. It is gingered with snippets from Dantec's favourite philosophers and loaded with thoughts of his own. The result is a real workout for the reader. Babylon Babies is a vast encyclopedia of the future as seen through a crystal ball with cracks in the glass.... Babylon Babies is part of a genre that makes play with religious ideas. You might call it theo-fiction.

ThickOnline.com

[T]his novel by Maurice Dantec was an epic ride.

New York Times Book Review

Babylon Babies, an under-appreciated novel by French punk rocker turned writer Maurice G. Dantec, deserves a wider audience, and not just because its author is frequently mentioned in the same breath as Michel Houellebecq (and definitely not because the book is being adapted into a movie starring Vin Diesel)... what makes this novel (translated by Noura Wedell) so haunting is its vision of a near future in which society has fractured along every possible national, tribal and sectarian fault line.

Science Fiction

Dantec is a literary revolution.

Arthur Bangs

Dantec has created a compelling story with evocative ideas that may prove even more illuminating with subsequent readings, and a reader who undertakes the arduous journey from cover to cover will be rewarded with an entertaining tale.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169862362
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 06/25/2008
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

1

So living was an incredible experience, where the most beautiful day of your entire existence could be your last, where sleeping with death guaranteed seeing the next morning, and where a few golden rules were constant. Never walk in the direction of the wind, never turn your back to a window, never sleep in the same place twice, always stay in the sun’s axis, trust in nothing and no one, suspend your breath with the perfection of the living dead on the point of freeing the metal’s salvation. Occasionally, a few variables could slip in, the sun’s position in the sky, the weather, who you were dealing with.

From where he was crouching at the top of the embankment along the path, Toorop towered over his victim. In the west, the sun was lowering onto the horizon, lacquering the ochre earth of the Sinkiang Northern Highlands a volcanic yellow orange. The air was dry, still vibrating with the day’s accumulated heat. It had an unreal purity. It was perfect weather for killing.

A cool wind blew in from the east, from the low grounds, the great Taklamakan Desert. The word in Uygur meant, “the place you enter, but from which you do not depart.” The air, which was torrid in the plains, at this 2000-meter altitude was as sharp as a bayonet sheath. Once the sun had set behind the eternal snow-capped peaks, the air would freeze faster than you could breathe in or release your last breath.

The man was lying on his back. One arm, stretched perpendicular, had been stranded on a little thistle bush. The other was folded beneath him. The man was still alive. It wasn’t his lucky day. Each breath produced a reflex shudder of muscles. An exhausted groan intermittently escaped his blood-filled mouth. Toorop was giving him a grace period of a few minutes, at most. Minutes that would seem like hours. The 12.7 mm bullet had entered the biological structure diagonally, near the liver. Toorop knew, however, that it could have come to rest in the cerebellum, in the femoral artery, or in an even more sensitive organ.

The young guy’s face, like a chemical test, revealed the surprise of a life viciously sliced by a crazy projectile turning back upon itself on impact, before zigzagging in all directions inside the body. This type of ammunition diffuses its energy with such intensity that, in addition to physiological trauma, the shock wave it puts in motion provokes serious nerve damage. A beautiful Manchu face, not more than twenty; the watery eyes endlessly pondering the fragility of existence faced with the metal of pain.

Toorop remembered the I-Ching aphorism to which the fourteenth of the Thirty-Six Stratagems referred. “It is not I who seek the young fool; the young fool seeks me.” The 14th stratagem was curiously entitled “Raise a corpse from the dead,” and went like this:

He does not let himself be used who can still act for his own purposes.

He will plead to be used who can do nothing more.

One must use the useless for one’s own ends.

In such circumstances, this sermon was no more obscure than another. The agonizing man had served his ends well. Climbing down the embankment, Toorop knew what had to be done.

Three young buzzards had just alighted, croaking, next to the body. Not paying it the slightest attention, they started furrowing into the olive-green jacket, boring through the cloth with a single honed stroke, to recover a piece of bloodied meat they’d gulp down with a jerky head gesture. Toorop had a clear vision of the condemned man’s ultimate reflex movement, trying to delay his end. The carcass shuddered; a trembling hand attempted in vain to raise itself from the earth and scribbled upon it an illegible message. For an instant, Toorop considered the natural process occurring. His gaze didn’t even try to avoid the bloody rosette constellating the soldier’s abdomen where the birds were working, or, on the orange-yellow earth around him, the black puddle with crimson contours that the rocky moor drank up avidly.

As he approached, one of the buzzards, flapping his wings, let out a dissatisfied croak and straightened into a posture of aggressive ostentation. The two others continued to feast on the man’s stomach, impassively wading in a carpet of blood, spongy tissue, and intestine parts.

A smell of guts and shit tickled his nostrils at the whim of the wind’s breath. The dead or dying man’s perfume left his mouth with a residue like the aftertaste of rank beer. Toorop had just extracted the “Schiskov” from the holster on his back. It was an Aurora, a polyvalent weapon equipped to deal with any kind of urgent situation, and quite simply the world’s best assault rifle. Toorop cocked the breech with a sharp movement, aimed, and shot a bullet smack into the soldier’s head.

The gunshot vibrated for a long time in the natural echo chamber of the high mountains. Toorop heard the man’s sigh in it, finally delivered from this world of flesh and steel, finally freed from life, and from the three buzzards.



As the birds of prey fired off toward the raw dusk sky, wings bloodied, and the shot’s echo resonated in the immense space before him, Toorop thought a passage from Rumi, or a verse from Dead Man Walking, was in order. But he felt a sweet vibration running along his thigh, cutting short his flow of thoughts. His hand plunged into the pocket of his battle-dress and emerged armed with a small Motorola GPS cell phone. The LCD screen flashed a message from General Command, informing him of the presence of Chinese drones in the sector. It was alphanumeric, encrypted by a special CIA program that those PLA number-crunching shit faces could keep trying to decode. Even their highly parallel processing Fujitsus developed with Yakuza funds in Sichuan underground factories couldn’t touch it. According to the Russian dealers who supplied the program, it was impenetrable. The sum of the planet’s computer resources, even with fifty years of uninterrupted work, couldn’t crack it. Four-eyes with the British accent, in charge of the demo for the Uygur guerrillas, wanly appreciating with a nod of the head, called it Transfinite Re-encoding with Chaotic Modelization. For the Uygurs, it simply meant Allah didn’t want the PLA to decode their communications. That was the least He could do.

Toorop turned to the west, where the sky combined azure flashes with milky, napalm-hued machines. He knelt down beside the body and started the looting. A local make automatic, an exact replica of a 1911 model Colt. With two full chargers to boot. A French make grenade. In the jacket pocket, he scored a pack of Kools made in Peking. He hated Kools but he could exchange them for Russian Marlboros or Indian Camels.

He flipped the body over with his foot, rolling it along the rocky ground. The AK-47 was strapped across its back, the butt facing up. Intact within was a brand new 30-bullet magazine, fresh out of the assembly lines of the Ministry of Military Planning. Toorop retrieved the booty with an experienced hand. It was the law of the mountain. The transparent secret of nature. The hunting code. The ritual exchange of life and death fetishized through trophy. All that shit, just a habit. That went back to the origins of the world.

With an assured gesture, Toorop lifted the sleeves of the mountain jacket; the GPS biobeeper made a slight, black carbon swell, running just under the skin near the left wrist, above a very pretty gold watch. The main function of the biobeeper, copied from US Army technology, was to send out a digital radio signal on a regular basis indicating the position and metabolic state of its wearer. For now, a small red diode pulsed there in silence, as if saying its wearer wasn’t at his best, and that he’d stay at this position for a while.

With the tip of his knife, Toorop pierced the epidermis, disembedded the small component, and threw it into the ravine, and the gold watch into the bottom of a pocket.

He turned the body over again and finished the search by reaching for its magnetic ID tag and a few crumpled bills in different local currencies. The military tag was just to give the PLA bureaucrats some work. The clams would be for later, for Almaty slut dives, a few new-look Es from Kazakh dealers, possibly a Russian version Taiwanese flick shown in a Soviet period movie theater, its heavy constructivism and patched-up seats having witnessed the parade of asses of all the generations since Khrushchev. At least.

Toorop emerged from his reverie and walked over to the Kirghiz horse, a beautiful gray mare mottled with black, which he mounted without resistance. His own had succumbed to a bad fall three days earlier. This mare was the pure bounty of Allah, as the Uygurs would have said. She was both robust and slightly wild, young and experienced, a real mountaineer ride. He caressed her muzzle, took her by the reins, climbed onto the PLA regulation saddle, its brass buckles stamped with the red star, and moved down the path towards the body. He gave it a last look, hung the Barrett on the saddle, placed his Aurora in his back holster, slung the Chinese AK-47 across his chest, and with a yap and a kick in the ribs, led the animal towards the sunny bluff, turning his back to the white heights of the Turugart Shankou.

The hoof sounds on the rocks covered the croaking of the buzzards circling over the body behind him. Later, at the bottom of the pass, a sharp gust of cold wind made him realize that the sun had just disappeared behind the mountains. A slate-blue shadow swooped down onto the lunar gray stones. The sky was turning an abyssal violet. The first stars were visible. A crescent moon appeared between two snowy summits, great ashy mounds caught in a shaft of black light and lacquered in mercury. The lunar orb would reach its zenith in the heart of night.

It was breathtakingly beautiful.





Kill two men a week, at least. Live on the prowl, levying arms, munitions, food, drugs, cash money—or plastic, clothes, horses. Endlessly hound enemy communications to predict border-patrol movements. Be constantly on the move, by night. Avoid search and destroy drones. Sometimes wait for days on end before you see a silhouette appear in the viewfinder. Try to have some kind of silent dialogue with the prey before you pull the trigger, and again merge into the dark, melt into it, sleep a bit, wait for a new morning, a new man to kill.

This was his life now, and Toorop had no complaints. As he remarked long ago to a war correspondent in search of “picturesque characters,” someone had to do it. A handful of men had to fight for lost causes in the world’s last frontiers, and sometimes for much worse. The wheel of history had to go on crushing lives if the rest of the world wanted to continue feeding on their TV screens.

At the time, the girl from the BBC hadn’t answered. Her digital video camera locked onto him like the globular black eye of a vampire machine. Toorop knew instinctively that she thought he was crazy, and he wondered how she’d seen through him so fast. Only a freak would spend his time in the steppes and mountains of Central Asia with two or three Chinese strategy books in his pocket, an arctic survival blanket from the Russian Army capable of weathering temperatures lower than 250 degrees centigrade, a US Air Force First Aid Kit complete with emergency supplies, and whole boxes of new-age methamphetamines in all possible forms, each geared to a specific use. Epidermal patches, auto- injectable capsules, pills for sensory or motor activity reinforcement, anti-fatigue bracing, oxygenation, red blood cell count, memory tone, or information processing capacity. Better than a Tour de France cycling peloton, he’d said, smiling. The modern headhunter’s pharmacy.

He didn’t give the girl the complete list on the spot. He just muttered something like: “The science of war does not allow for error.”

Journalists, especially Western ones, constantly had to be reminded of the basics.

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