Ryman initially wrote a short story for The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction entitled "Have Not Have", which was included in the April 2001 edition[4] (later reprinted in the June 2014 issue of
Clarkesworld Magazine[5]). This was expanded into a novel initially titled Air: Or, Have Not Have, and renamed to just Air in all editions since the first.
Plot introduction
Air is the story of a town's fashion expert Chung Mae, a smart but
illiterate peasant woman in a small village in the fictional country of Karzistan (loosely based on the country of
Kazakhstan), and her suddenly leading role in reaction to dramatic, worldwide experiments with a new
information technology called Air. Air is information exchange, not unlike the
Internet, that occurs in everyone's brain and is intended to connect the world. After a test of Air is imposed on Mae's unprepared mountain town, everyone and everything changes, especially Mae who was deeper into Air than any other person. Afterwards, Mae struggles to prepare her people for what is to come while learning all about the world outside her home.
Reception
F&SF reviewer Robert. K. J. Killheffer praised Ryman's "humane insight and sympathy" and "incisive meditations on the process of social and cultural change," concluding that the novel is "not merely powerful, thought-provoking, and profoundly moving, but indispensable."[6]
Trivia
A country called Karzistan also appears in the video game Beyond: Two Souls, where it's an East Asian country having a similar condenser, a portal to the Infraworld (the ghost world), like the United States. The protagonist Jodie Holmes has to destroy the condenser during a
CIA mission.
Release details
2004, UK, St. Martin's Griffin (
ISBN0-312-26121-7), Pub date ? October 2004, paperback (First edition)
2005, UK, Gollancz (
ISBN0-575-07697-6), Pub date 21 July 2005, hardback
2005, UK, Gollancz (
ISBN0-575-07811-1), Pub date 14 September 2006, paperback