Zed by Joanna Kavenna Book Review – Book and Film Globe

Joanna Kavennas latest novel Zed takes place in a not-too-far-off future where the tech company Beetle registers the smallest decisions made by individuals through wearable devices called BeetleBands. With this data, Beetle adjusts the predictive algorithms of individuals lives. If a woman orders a fresh squeezed orange juice, her algorithm alters accordingly. If she smokes a cigarette, another adjustment. Through such minute accumulation, Beetle has developed a predictive method that knows what shes going to do before she does it. Its the most accurate Magic 8 Ball you can imagine.

Or is it? In Zed, a man murders his wife and children, upending Kavennas hyper-efficient world. Its the kind of story that horrifies people for all the right reasons, but its doubly disturbing because the algorithm didnt predict it. Beetle engineer and company man Dan Varley struggles with the effects of a technology so tantalizingly close to perfect:

[T]he predictive algorithms were behaving very oddly. Or, people were behaving very oddly and not remotely as they should. Suddenly, the precious and beautiful bond between predictive algorithm and human behaviora bond on which Varleys entire career, life, payment in BeetleBits, and continued survival in the world was foundedseemed tenuous. At that moment, an alarm went off on Varleys BeetleBand, indicating that his heart was under extreme strain and he must take urgent action.

What kind of savage world counts on technology to determine what its people need and when they need it? If youre noting some parallels to our world, youre getting Kavennas drift. But she doesnt rely solely on dear God, what have we done? fear to keep you turning pages. She also uses humor, which acts as a kind of soft filter to her more harrowing implications. At one point, Beetle CEO Guy Matthias and his journalistic tool Dan Strachey engage in whats ostensibly a business meeting but what Strachey becomes convinced is something more portentous:

[Strachey] was about to pick up his glass again but then he wondered suddenly if it was poisoned. But that was absurd! Guy would never poison him. It would simply be too analog.

The humor of Zed helps separate the novel from similar efforts such as Dave Eggerss The Circle, which focuses on a world more on the cusp of the battle between digital and analog and therefore doesnt crack much of a smile. In Kavennas version of our future, this battle is largely over, with the vast majority giving themselves over to the idea that Beetle equals better. The only holdouts are those of the resistance group LOTUS, which operates largely from the credo that not participating in such data accumulation means youre not guilty of anything.

Such a tenet is anathema to Matthias and others in the straight world of this dystopian milieu. Like the episode of Black Mirror starring Bryce Dallas Howard, Matthias is very locked in to digital ratings as measurements of success and fulfillment, but he also has his eye on using his companys digital access to shape human behavior:

Beetle were not only watching everyone, which everyone already knew and no longer seemed to care about, but also inspiring them to act in certain ways, best ways as defined by Beetle.

Its not hard to find the idea of such an imposition offensive. Then again, how is this different from Facebook advertising? Thats the kind of connection Kavenna exploits throughout Zed. The novel serves as its own kind of efficient algorithm reflecting something close to our current condition back at us and asking, Do you care? Unfortunately, all signs do not point to yes.

(Doubleday, January 14, 2020)

Continued here:
Zed by Joanna Kavenna Book Review - Book and Film Globe

Related Posts