Y2K: The Millennium Bug, by Don L. Tiggre
Book Review by Robert B. Boardman
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
          In the final hours of December 31, 1999, the lights went out.
          But you know that already; what you're probably wondering is, what 
happened afterwards. I recommend you read Y2K: The Millennium Bug 
to find out.
          This novel is much more than a story about the dark side of our 
reliance upon computers (and government). It is a thriller that 
follows the lives of a number of people: those who prepared for the 
worst, and prospered; those who were taken by surprise, but whose 
instincts and attitudes helped them to survive; and those whose 
dependence upon society's fragile infrastructure was total and fatal.
          The book is full of characters I would love to know: people with 
no more native ability than your next-door neighbor possesses, but 
people who triumph because of their intellectual and moral integrity.
          And, refreshingly, the bad guys are truly bad. I found myself 
booing and hissing them, even though Tiggre develops their characters 
with enough skill that there is no hint of melodrama.
          Characterization is a necessary feature if a novel is to be really 
great, but there also must be a terrific story. And this book has 
one; rather it has several, and Tiggre excels in developing these 
complex stories while keeping them under control and weaving them 
together for a very satisfying ending.
          Buy it, read it, and get ready for the Millennium!
[Purchase this book from Amazon.com by clicking here 
or see the next article for other sources.]
Robert B. Boardman is the author of the SF/political satire novel 
Savior of Fire, now available at amazon.com -- purchase his 
book by clicking here.