![]() Scott ( Dreamships Burning Bright ) seems more interested in using her command of the genre to explore such subjects as the importance of friendship, the strength and intelligence of women, lesbian eroticism and the workings of community. ![]() She published her first novel in 1984, and has since written some two dozen science fiction and fantasy works, including three co-authored with her partner, Lisa A. ![]() Their many adventures include a virtual-reality equivalent of a high-noon shootout, but loose plotting weakens the tension surrounding most of their escapades, as problems unexpectedly resolve or are simply dropped. Melissa Scott studied history at Harvard College and Brandeis University, and earned her PhD. To save her own job and to clear her ex-lover's name, Cerise must team up with Trouble again. Three years later, Cerise is working for an industrial corporation when someone begins impersonating Trouble on the nets, stealing secrets and leaving viruses behind. Trouble predicts these changes and goes legit. Both women have been wired with the newest technology, a ``brainworm'' that enables them to receive sensations when they're plugged in-a development despised by the older, mostly male heterosexual ``netwalkers.'' When Congress passes the Evans-Tindale bill to outlaw the brainworm, life on the net threatens to become more dangerous. ![]() Cerise and Trouble are lesbian lovers who plug into computer networks to steal industrial secrets to sell on the gray market. Scott's talents for creating a future both hauntingly familiar and exotically remote are showcased in this feminist cyberpunk romp. ![]()
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