Title: The Demon and the City Author: Liz Williams Year: 2006 Publisher: Night Shade Books Reviewer: Jake Beal The excellent novel "The Demon and the City" continues Ms. Williams' exploration of a world where high technology and traditional Chinese mysticism blend together dangerously. I keep seeing the word "cyberpunk" tossed around in reference to these books, but I think its use is inappropriate. To me, cyberpunk is all about attitude and the relative position of the characters within their world. Usually, there is a technologically enabled breakdown of societal order, and the protagonists are unwilling participants in a greater game who are trying to find some way to survive the conflict of great entities. In Ms. Williams' world, all of the lack of social order is merely the continued realities of developing nations, and the protagonists, while small compared with the corporate and bureaucratic entities they are entangled with, are always taken seriously as potential players. I would, in fact, categorize this book as something more like a standard sci-fi/adventure novel, with police work as the hook: it's too upbeat for noir and too grandiose for police procedural. "The Demon and the City" begins with a new supernatural case in the city of Singapore 3, this time being worked by the demon Zhu Irzh while Detective Chen is on vacation. Ms. Williams then sets off on a story that explores more aspects of the complex and intriguing world she has constructed: the relationship between Chinese mysticism and the supernatural of other nations (apparently there are extradition treaties), feng shui, the politics of Celestials, family relations with the afterlife, and corporate power. Weaving it all together is a mystery that blows up into something that (surprise!) threatens the entirety of the current order. In my review of her first novel, "Snake Agent," I complained about a few things that are mercifully absent in this book. I shall not even recall them any further, except to say that I applaud the improvement in her writing craft. I might even recommend starting with this book: it contains no spoilers for the previous one (except that all of the key players survive, which was never much in doubt) and is much better constructed. For myself, I enjoyed it very much and plan to read the next in the series as well. Perhaps by then Ms. Williams' craft will have improved yet further and she will have figured out how to generate tension without threatening the world.