Market Forces by Richard K. Morgan
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
The author's note at the beginning of Market Forces says it evolved from "...nasty idea to short story to screenplay to the novel..." and that it was inspired in part by Mad Max. And that is exactly how it reads.
Market Forces is a near-future dystopia where international finance corporations openly bankroll wars around the world, inequality in capitalist nations is extreme, and corporate executives win promotion through road-rage battles. The protagonist is Chris, an executive with lower-class origins pushing his way upward into the privileged ranks. Along the way he struggles against the other executives, against his own conscience, and against the system.
There's a whole lot of big-budget action movie in this book. The driving duels, obviously, but plenty more too. Sex and drugs and money and betrayal and bloody fights (in and out of cars). It's not hard to see where "screenplay" fit into the evolution of the novel that the author mentioned. I'm pretty sure the same story could easily have been told with a lot less drinking, drugs, sex, and graphic violence...but it wouldn't have the same spectacle feel.
For the first half of the book, I had a hard time taking it very seriously. The idea of Mad Max-style road duels didn't fit all that well into the more serious world-building. It doesn't seem like too much of a stretch from today's world to get to the idea of giant financial powerhouses abandoning all pretense of morality, or to have society stratified into the privileged rich and downtrodden poor with governments pushed aside by corporate power. Executives running one another off the road made it all seem pretty cheesy, though. But as the book went on, there was a lot more intrigue and political maneuvering than straight-up road rage, and by the time it got back to driving I was used to the idea.
Much of the novel is taken up by Chris trying to come to terms with what kind of person he is. Is he a ruthless executive driver who ruins third-world nations and rival executives alike? Or does he have enough empathy for others in situations not unlike his own background to show some mercy? What does it mean to be loyal to his own beliefs and to the people he knows? Not easy questions, and there's not really a definitive answer. Everything ends up in shades of gray, no easy right or wrong resolutions.
Market Forces paints a disturbing-but-intriguing picture of a world where amoral financial interest has taken control. It's even fairly believable, aside from the idea of road-rage car duels. But those duels and the sex/drugs/violence action-movie spectacle isn't really my style, and felt over-done. If that's your thing, though, you'll likely enjoy this one.