Zeitgeist

Zeitgeist

by Bruce Sterling

Narrated by Jeff Woodman

Unabridged — 10 hours, 24 minutes

Zeitgeist

Zeitgeist

by Bruce Sterling

Narrated by Jeff Woodman

Unabridged — 10 hours, 24 minutes

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Overview

Bruce Sterling is "perhaps the sharpest observer of our media-choked culture working today" (Time), offering haunting visions of a future shaped by a madness of our own making. His latest novel is a startling tragicomic spectacle that takes a breathtaking look at a world where the future is being chased down by the past....

Zeitgeist

It's 1999 in Cyprus, an ancient island bejeweled with blue-helmeted UN peacekeepers and littered with rusting land mines, corroding barbed wire, and illegal sewage dumps. Here, in the Turkish half of the island, the ever-enterprising Leggy Starlitz has alighted, pausing on his mission to storm the Third World with the "G-7" girls, the cheapest, phoniest all-girl band ever to wear Wonderbras and spandex. And his market is staring him in the face: millions of teenagers trapped in a world of mullahs and mosques, all ready to blow their pocket change on G-7's massive merchandising campaign--and to wildly anticipate music the group will never release.

Leggy's brilliant plan means doing business with some of the world's most dangerous people. His business partner is the rich and connected Mehmet Ozbey, a man with many identities and a Turkish girlfriend whose beauty and singing voice could blow G-7**right out of the water. His security chief is Pulat Romanevich Khoklov, who learned to fly MiG combat jets in Afghanistan and now pilots Milosevic's personal airplane. Among these thieves, schemers, and killers, Leggy must act quickly and decisively. Bombs are dropping in Yugoslavia. Y2K is just around the corner. And the only rule to live by is that the whole scheme stops before the year 2000.

But Leggy gets a surprise when the daughter he's never met arrives on his doorstep. A major fan of G-7, she is looking for a father--and her search forces Leggy to examine his**life before making a madcap journey in search of a father of his own. It's a detour that puts his G-7 Zeitgeist in some real jeopardy. For in Istanbul, Leggy's former partners are getting restless, and the G-7 girls are beginning to die....Zeitgeist is a world-beat tale of smugglers, paparazzi, greed, war, and a new era of cultural crusades. Here Bruce Sterling proves once again that in the fiction of imagination, he is one of the most insightful writers of our time.

Editorial Reviews

bn.com

Our Review
The closing years of the 20th century were good ones for Bruce Sterling. Beginning in 1994, he published a series of memorable, idiosyncratic novels (Heavy Weather, Holy Fire, Distraction) that brilliantly reflected the political, social, and technological trends of a turbulent era. Sterling closed out a productive decade with Zeitgeist, a visionary portrait of a balkanized world that is slouching, uneasily, toward the millennium.

Zeitgeist begins in Turkish Cyprus in 1999. Its "hero" is Leggy Starlitz, peripatetic entrepreneur and recurring Sterling character. Leggy, for once, is in the money, having discovered and exploited the basic principle of modern marketing: Tell the people what they want, then sell it to them. What Leggy is selling is a prefabricated, all-girl pop group called G-7. G-7 has neither talent nor musical ambition but serves as the basis for a massive, ancillary marketing campaign that sells toys, clothes, and overpriced accessories to impressionable teenagers everywhere. It is also the first pop group with a built-in expiration date. Leggy plans to dissolve the enterprise on or before January 1, 2000, at which point the "master narrative" -- the zeitgeist itself -- will, according to Leggy, assume a new and unpredictable form.

Leggy's scam goes belly-up when his partner, a Turkish zealot named Mehmet Ozbey, assumes control of G-7. Mehmet plans to use the group as a weapon in the "cultural war" against the entrenched fundamentalists of the Moslem world. At about the same time, Leggy encounters Zeta, the 11-year-old daughter he has never known. Trading one set of responsibilities for another, Leggy slowly transforms himself from an opportunistic hustler into something he has never been before: a father.

The bulk of the ensuing narrative is a patented, plotless Sterling tour of a fractured contemporary landscape. Leggy and Zeta travel together from Cyprus to Hawaii, from Hawaii to Mexico, from Mexico to Istanbul, encountering a colorful variety of crooks, con men, schemers and believers along the way. Blending satire and documentary realism with an occasional touch of the fantastic (such as a visit from the ghost of Leggy's father, an enigmatic spirit who speaks in perfect palindromes), Zeitgeist looks backward toward a vile, violent century marked by death camps and genocidal initiatives, and forward toward a world shaped by a different kind of "narrative," a narrative in which "the children stop screaming" and "the pain and the terror goes away." The result is a shrewd, funny, endlessly entertaining novel that is essential reading for anyone concerned with the forces that have shaped the modern world, and for anyone interested in speculative fiction at its most intelligent, developed, and assured.||||||||

--Bill Sheehan

Bill Sheehan reviews horror, suspense, and science fiction for Cemetery Dance, The New York Review of Science Fiction, and other publications. His book-length critical study of the fiction of Peter Straub, At the Foot of the Story Tree, has just been published by Subterranean Press (www.subterraneanpress.com).

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Rife with profound ruminations on the "master narrative" of life, Sterling's newest evokes vestiges of his collaboration with William Gibson (1991's The Difference Engine) as he journeys back to 1999 to detail the escapades of Leggy Starlitz and his latest marketing triumph--the G-7 girls. Using his international girl band to move products such as G-7 lip gloss, candies and sparkly pantyhose, Starlitz embarks on a glamorous Third World tour that skids to an abrupt halt in Turkish Cyprus. Although the dialogue riffs along energetically while Starlitz and Turkish millionaire mobster Mehmet Ozbey discuss the future of G-7, politics and life's "deepest truths," fans of Sterling's fast-paced thrillers will find little suspense or intrigue in this experimental piece. Starlitz passively steps aside, allowing Ozbey to use the band as a front for his illicit negotiations, and dutifully assumes the role of father when his lesbian ex-wife suddenly appears with his telekinetic daughter in tow. Abandoning Cyprus to conjure up his "Javanese Navajo" father (who dematerialized as a result of being too close to an atomic bomb test in the '50s), Starlitz travels to New Mexico and stages mock-Christmas festivities. When the G-7 girls begin to die, however, Starlitz returns to Cyprus to engage in another aimless battle of wits with Ozbey. Although this tragicomedy resonates with Sterling's striking prose and strong characterizations, these do little to salvage a tale that reads more like a disjointed dream than a cohesive narrative. Nevertheless, Sterling's strong following will certainly buoy the sales of this leaden sinker. (Nov. 7) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Leggy Starlitz, shameless entrepreneur and manager of the all-girl G-7 band, has his finger on the pulse of the 20th century's final year--until his old associates grow impatient with him, and someone begins murdering members of his band. The author of Distraction puts his sharp perceptions and cynical optimism to good use in this wry commentary on the Y2K phenomenon and other foibles of the modern world. Sterling's ironic voice and pointed humor make him one of sf's most lucid satirists. A good choice for sf collections. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Glenn Garelik

Sterling is a sharp-tongued, convincing witness to global disintegration.
New York Times Book Review

Kirkus Reviews

Turn-of-the-millennium spectacular, from the estimable Sterling (Distraction, 1998, etc.). Impresario Lech "Leggy" Starlitz arrives in the impoverished Turkish half of Cyprus ("Houseplants had eaten all the homes. Feral lemons and oranges supported a miniecosystem of rats and stray dogs") ready to launch his girl band, G-7, at the Islamic world. The girls, known by their nationalities (the French One, the American One, etc.) can't play or sing, though Leggy knows it's not about music but concept. He has only one rule: it ends at Y2K. His new partner is Mehmet Ozbey, a handsome Turk with friends in the secret police and ways to launder money. To Mehmet, Leggy makes one further stipulation: none of the girls must die. Then Leggy discovers he has a daughter by his lesbian ex: 11-year-old Zeta loves G-7 and has telekinetic abilities—so long as there are no recording devices in the vicinity. And soon, despite his wheeling and dealing with Russian gangsters, Leggy's squeezed out by Mehmet. He decides it's time to disappear, so he smuggles himself and Zeta into the US in order to contact his father. The latter, having been at ground zero in the first nuclear bomb test, has become delocalized in time: he exists "anywhen" in the 20th century and speaks entirely in palindromes. Thereafter, Leggy turns straight, working in a 7-11, sending Zeta to school—until he learns that Mehmet intends to continue G-7 into the next millennium; worse, he has allowed some of the girls to die. Time for Leggy to intervene. An inspired and brilliant paean to the old millennium and harbinger of the new, brimming with wit, flair, andinsight:Y2K's Catch-22.

From the Publisher

Brilliant!”
The Washington Post

“A gem.”
Chicago Sun-Times

“Turn-of-the-millennium spectacular ... Y2K’s Catch 22!”
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“The book’s preliminaries showcase Sterling’s erudition about back-page global politics, [but] they’re upstaged by his coolest trick: He can write about pop.”
City Pages (Minneapolis)

Also by Bruce Sterling:

Novels:
The Artificial Kid
The Difference Engine
(with William Gibson)
Distraction
Heavy Weather
Holy Fire
Involution Ocean
Islands In the Net
Schismatrix

Stories:
Crystal Express
Globalhead
A Good Old-Fashioned Future

Nonfiction:
The Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the Electronic Frontier

Editor:
Mirror Shades: The Cyberpunk Anthology

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171937805
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 10/01/2001
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Summer in Istanbul. Roses in a hammered silver urn. Fresh-ground coffee in a shiny brass hand-mill. The rich tang of fertilizer and fuel oil hung over the damaged cafe. Starlitz could smell the hot caramel aftertaste of the car bomb, right through the baked metal, smashed cement, and burnt upholstery.

“Where are the girls?” said the Turk.

“The girls are in Cyprus. They’re partying.”

“With Greeks?”

“Oh, heavens no,” Starlitz assured him. “The girls are in the fun part of Cyprus. Turkish Cyprus.”

The Turk smiled. He picked open the lid of the coffeepot and deposited a heaping spoon of brown sugar.

Starlitz leaned back in his wrought-iron chair and folded his plump hands over his lilac waistcoat. He and the Turk sat in companionable silence, with hooded eyes behind their designer shades, and watched the pot reach a boil.

The Turk, who called himself Mehmet Ozbey, was young, and rich, with a film star’s good looks. In his Italian leather jeans and camel-hair jacket, Ozbey was the picture of masculine chic.

Starlitz felt at peace. Local events were going very much his way. There had been a time in his checkered career when he would have shown up in Istanbul two days before a car bomb. He would have hit town with the plan, and the contacts, and the agenda, and he would have found the old city strained and jittery with fatalistic Ottoman tension.

Here at the tag end of the twentieth century, however, Starlitz was pampered by circumstance. He had arrived in Istanbul two days after a car bomb. The catastrophe was behind them now. They had entered the professionalrealm of consequence management. Bored Turkish cops measured their new monster pothole with yellow metal pull-tapes. Indifferent janitors swept up the scattered tonnage of broken glass. Istanbul downtown girls, in their chunky gold chains and Chanel suits, were trying to window-shop through the street’s battered length of plywood sheeting.

Mere domestic terrorism could not cause Mehmet Ozbey to break a business appointment. The shrapnel-damaged cafe was almost deserted, but the young pop promoter had arrived bang on time, clean, shaved, sober, and toting a white calfskin valise. The cafe Ozbey had chosen was lovely, though its windows had all been shattered by the car bomb’s concussion. The cafe staff doted on Ozbey, touched by his loyalty during their trying circumstances. They kept tiptoeing up to offer lacquered trays of sliced melon and baklava.

A young woman passed the damaged cafe and caught sight of Ozbey. Instantly entranced, she stumbled headlong into a striped police sawhorse.

“My little girlfriend Gonca,” Ozbey remarked solemnly, “would very much like to meet your G-7 girls.”

“I’m sure that can be arranged.”

“She’s especially fond of the French One.”

“Everyone has a favorite G-7 girl,” Starlitz allowed.

“The French One has the most talent,” said Ozbey judiciously. “She can almost sing.”

Starlitz nodded. “Yeah, that’s her Left Bank cafe chanteuse riff.”

Starlitz and Ozbey watched the pot foam up, once, twice, and the full and traditional third time. Starlitz was pleased to have stolen this moment from the onrushing millennium. It was important to pry these little breathing spaces from the final hum of the dying century. It was good for him, like oxygen.

Ozbey removed the curved pot from its flickering burner, and with exaggerated hostly care he began to pour.

“Why is there no Russian G-7 girl?” Ozbey said, setting the pot aside. “Because it’s the Group of Eight now, officially. With Russia.”

“That’s an odd thing,” said Starlitz, accepting his cup. “No one ever asks me why we have no Russian girl in the group. Unless they’re Russian.”

“You don’t like Russians, Mr. Starlitz?”

“I fucking love Russians,” Starlitz said politely, “but Russians just don’t get it with the tie-in merchandising angle. They still think that a pop group has to sell music.”

Ozbey removed his shades, folded them fastidiously, put them in an inner jacket pocket. He lifted his gleaming demitasse and gazed at Starlitz across its gilded rim. “‘Selling the whole concept,’” he quoted.

“Right you are.” Starlitz savored a sip. He rinsed his molars with the coffee grounds. That subtle flavor of cardamom. Business was good.

Ozbey cocked his freshly coiffed head. “We sell the big picture. We sell the whole bag of wax.”

“It’s the spirit of the times.” Starlitz nodded. “It’s the soul of postmodernity.”

“We sell little plastic dolls, for instance.”

“‘G-7 action figures,’” Starlitz corrected.

“They’re very popular with children. And the lip gloss. The candies. Those very big shoes that they wear.”

“Yeah, G-7 WonderBras, G-7 pantyhose — the tie-in apparel thing has definitely been a breakthrough area for us.”

Ozbey put his cup down and leaned in intently. “Who is your supplier? For the clothes.”

“Indonesia, mostly,” said Starlitz. “Before the currency crash.”

Ozbey placed his jacketed elbows on the polished marble tabletop. “My Uncle the Minister,” he announced, “has many interests in the Turkish apparel trade. He is very influential in domestic Turkish manufacturing.”

“You don’t say.” Starlitz scratched his double chin thoughtfully. “That’s very interesting.”

“My Uncle the Minister has extensive interests in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.”

“The Republic is a very interesting place,” said Starlitz, leaning forward in tandem. “After just one week on the ground in Turkish Cyprus, I could tell that it’s a country of tremendous opportunity.”

Starlitz lifted one meaty hand in mock demurral. “Yes, I know — some people claim that the Greek half of the island has a better tourist industry. But if you ask me, the Greek scene in Cyprus is yesterday. They’re all overbuilt and tapped out. All those nightclubs, and the rave scene, and the big cruise ships in from Beirut...”

“Let me show you the Meridien,” said Ozbey. “Turgut Altimbasak’s casino in Girne. That establishment is very ... what is the English word?”

“‘Suave’?”

“Yes! Very suave, very international-playboy. Mr. Altimbasak is a friend of my uncle’s. You could gamble freely there, Mr. Starlitz. You could run a big tab.”

Starlitz considered this bold proposal. It was very much to his liking. “Call me Lech,” he said.

“Okay!” grinned Ozbey. “You call me ‘Mehmetcik.’ Mehmetcik, it’s like ‘Johnny.’”

“Mehmetcik, my friend, let’s be frank together,” said Starlitz, steepling his big blunt fingers. “In the past we in G-7 were very displeased with our offshore accounts in Jersey and Bimini. But then you brought those Turkish Cypriot banks to our attention. Your Uncle the Minister had a few helpful words there. It’s all very smooth now. That broke up the red tape. My accountant’s very happy about all this.”

“It’s good to have happy accountants,” said Ozbey. “We should all have happy accountants.”

“We can all be very happy doing business together,” Starlitz said. “As long as we always remember the number-one G-7 rule.”

“The number-one rule is that everything shuts down before the year 2000.”

Starlitz leaned back in contentment. “Mehmetcik, I knew you were special from the first time you sent us fan mail.”

Ozbey nodded intently. He was shifting gears now, onto his favorite topic, himself. “People tell me that I’m special,” he concurred. “My Uncle the Minister, my wife, my girlfriend, my many good friends in the pop business world — they all say I have a very special gift.”

Starlitz watched as a starstruck Turkish housewife entangled herself in a flat yellow strand of police tape. “Yeah,” he offered.

“I have a gift. Don’t you agree?”

“Absolutely, Mehmetcik. It’s written all over you. It couldn’t be more obvious.”

Ozbey sat up. “And you, Lech. You are also a gifted man. Obviously.”

Starlitz shook his head.

Ozbey’s dark eyes gleamed. “Don’t be shy! People tell me things, behind the scenes. They tell me: This man Leggy Starlitz, he is more than just a businessman. He is an imam. Like they say in Silicon Valley, he’s a business guru.”

“Aw, forget that industry scuttlebutt. Musicians are way superstitious. They’re full of New Age crap.”

“Do you know the future? They say that you do.”

Starlitz shrugged. “Sure I do, sorta. I’m into consumer trends, man. It’s all about pop, right? Demographic analysis. Demand curves. Stoking the hit machine. It’s an Internet thing, basically.”

“Then you do know the future.”

“Aw, crystal balls are for suckers.” Starlitz scowled. “You want some supernatural powers, pal? Find a money laundry. You can work miracles with those things.”

Ozbey frowned. He daintily lifted a wedge of sliced melon, changed his mind about tasting it, and tactfully put it back down. “To speak life’s deepest truths across two languages ... It’s very hard to speak about these secret things. There are so many important secrets in life — realities that are never said.”

Starlitz very loudly said nothing. To fill the silence he watched a Turkish crow pick its way across the cafe’s rooftop. The dusty bird, its trash looter’s eyes like two bullet tips, was shivering with greed. Starlitz surreptitiously dropped a chunk of melon.

Ozbey toyed with the ornate coffeepot. “Please tell me that you somehow understand these secret truths I cannot speak.”

“Mehmet, just put a lid on it, okay? Don’t even go there.”

“But we are business partners. I must be sure you understand. I must be very clear from the beginning.” Ozbey sighed and lowered his voice. “I am a powerful secret master of the modern world’s deeper reality.”

“I’m hip!” Starlitz insisted, wincing. “I’m so hip that you didn’t even have to tell me that you weren’t saying that.”

“You and I can both break the laws of nature at will. We are great adepts with supernatural abilities that fools would find fantastic.” He examined Starlitz with frank concern. “Am I saying too much?”

“Mehmetcik, that dervish crap moves a lot of product in your part of the world, but I’m in a global outfit, so I’m not in the market for it. You’re a heavy operator with a lot of local connections. I know that, I respect that. That and a handshake, that oughta be enough for both of us. Let’s leave the deeper reality under the rug where it belongs.”

Ozbey seemed disappointed, but he was bearing up. “I see you came to my town of Istanbul to talk about the rug business. Yes? It’s nothing but business with Leggy Starlitz. Very well. I am your host, I will be polite. Say no more.”

Starlitz said nothing. The air was heavy with coffee and roses.

Ozbey reached deftly across the table and plucked up Starlitz’s coffee cup. “Since I am your host, let me entertain you. We have an old tradition here in Istanbul. We can read a man’s future in his coffee cup.”

“Hey, I was drinking that,” Starlitz protested.

“I’m very good at this,” Ozbey insisted. He brandished the demitasse with an aggressive grin, ritually swirling the coffee grounds. “What is your future, Leggy Starlitz? Let us see.”

“You don’t want to try that with me,” Starlitz told him.

“Don’t tell me what I want,” said Ozbey calmly. “Save that for teenage girls. I know very well what I want. I know it much better than you.” Ozbey cradled the coffee cup in both his hands. Then he gazed inside it, with a careful squint.

The cup was empty. It was perfectly clean.



The black rubber plates of the luggage conveyor track moved with eerie mechanical ease. Jet-lagged passengers appeared in silent clumps, awaiting their gear like the bored parishioners of some failing religion.

An apparition sidled silently past Starlitz. Floppy gray fabric hat, long translucent raincoat over bony shoulders, two camera cases and a folded tripod bag, a lumpy photographer’s vest and multipocketed khaki trousers. The ensemble ghosted through the airport on a pair of high-ankled Adidas monkey boots.

Starlitz tossed aside his glossy copy of Mixmag and rose from his red plastic seat. “Hey, Wiesel.”

Wiesel rotated his narrow head, his pale eyes like gimlets. The paparazzo’s blank face swam into focus then, and it registered resigned distaste. “Leggy, what are you doing in Istanbul?”

“Is this Istanbul, man? All airports feel the same to me.”

Wiesel shrugged uneasily. “Where are the girls?”

“The girls got a few days off. They’re poolside in a secret hotel. Naked and covered with cocoa butter.”

Wiesel’s sallow face showed a flicker of reflexive interest, but it faded rapidly. “G-7 are yesterday.”

“They’re yesterday in London, man, I agree with you there. In the London scene, fuckin’ tomorrow is yesterday. But spangled hose and lip gloss are the coming thing in Teheran.”

Wiesel examined the passing luggage, feigning indifference. Starlitz, who knew better, watched him weakening.

Wiesel’s eyes flicked up. “You mean to scam the mullahs, Leggy?”

“New regime in Iran, pal. Big window of opportunity there. I need your help again.”

Wiesel detached one swollen camera bag from the shoulder of his flimsy raincoat and set it with care on the floor. “Give it a rest! You and your boss man have nothing left to work with. The gimmick’s two years old. Fuck, they’re not even a band. They can’t sing. They can’t dance. They lip-synch. To tapes.”

Starlitz shrugged.

“They don’t even have names,” Wiesel insisted. “They’re seven random birds you picked up with adverts.”

Starlitz nodded. “All according to plan.”

“You’re gigging the arena circuit for chump change, in deepest, darkest Eastern Europe. There’s just nothing there, lad. You can’t make big stars out of nothing at all.”

Starlitz sighed patiently. “Who needs big stars? Big stardom is poison. This is all about the marketing concept. The first pop group that won’t sell music. The first pop group with an expiration date.”

“Like I said, gimmicks.”

“Lemme tell you about this upcoming Istanbul gig. It’s the first leg of our big Islamic pop tour. The setup behind this one is a thing of genius.”

Wiesel was visibly twitching. Celebrity bored him, but the lure of a well-planned hustle was more than Wiesel could withstand.

Then something caught Wiesel’s gimlet eye, and an expression of relief flooded his face, giving it an almost human cast. He rotated smartly on his rubber heel.

A motorized wheelchair had arrived at the baggage claim. It bore a woman in an off-the-shoulder Lycra stretch dress. She wore a blond wig: a bubble-headed cut with a broad wing of bangs. She had big blue eyes, and enormous breasts, which rose from her torso with the taut inflated look of sports equipment.

The wheelchair eased to a buzzing halt. Its female occupant looked Starlitz up and down, taking in his lime-green linen suit, the diamond pinky ring, the Gucci shoes.

Slowly, she emitted a stream of smoke. “Friend of yours, Benny?”

“It’s business, Princess.” Anxious to please, Wiesel stiffened. “This is Leggy.”

“Lech Starlitz.” Starlitz cordially offered his hand. The woman switched hands with the cigarette, absently wiped ash into the glittering Lycra fabric on her meaty thigh, and gave Starlitz’s fingers a damp, condescending squeeze.

“You can call me ‘Diana,’” she told him. “Most people do.”

“Is it dystrophy?” Starlitz asked her.

She smiled. “Nah.”

“Multiple sclerosis?”

“Nope!”

“It couldn’t be BSE.”

“Aw, fuck no! I don’t eat hamburgers, I’m a fuckin’ dancer!”

“It’s autoimmune syndrome,” Wiesel offered. “She’s allergic to herself.” He jerked one thumb at the luggage track. “I got her CAT scans with us. I got her full NMR scans. You should see all my prints, Leggy. They’re beauties.”

The woman pointed one lacquered finger. “My bags, Benny. Go get the damn bags.”

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