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Book Review: (CON)science: A Novel (Phoenix Horizon #3) by PJ Manney

cover art for (Con)science by PJ Manney

(CON)science: A Novel (Phoenix Horizon #3) by PJ Manney

47North, 2021

ISBN-13: 9781503948501

ISBN-10: 1503948501

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD, MP3  Bookshop.org  |  Amazon.com )

 

Note: this review contains spoilers for all three books in the series.

 

(CON)science is the third novel in PJ Manney’s Phoenix Horizon trilogy. Some trilogies by other authors can drag out plots that can be presented in one book, but Manney’s intricate, compelling story about a dystopian future, in which morality and ethics don’t keep pace with technology, requires multiple books.

 

In her first book (R)evolution, Manney introduces Peter Bernhardt, a driven, young Stanford graduate whose goal is to use breakthroughs in nanotechnology and computer science to cure brain disorders using computer implants that connect directly to brain cells by submicroscopic nanowires. Nanobots injected into blood vessels create the wires and also connect the rewired brain to other parts of the body. Peter creates a Silicon Valley start-up, but his venture capitalist insists that the nanobots be developed first and brought to market before the implants. Terrorists make aerosolized nanobots with Peter’s technology and kill thousands at a tech convention.

 

Another venture capitalist and former classmate, Carter Potsdam, helps Peter create a new company. An impatient Peter becomes the first cyborg. He has a miniaturized memory unit and neocortex implanted in himself and experiences the problems of accumulating and controlling every memory.

 

Carter initiates Peter into the Phoenix Club, a secret organization created by the Founding Fathers after the American Revolution. Members of the club include select politicians, businessmen, generals, scientists and other leaders who work to control and guide the country’s future. The Club planned the attack at the convention and plans to spread nanobots throughout the country to control the populace and maintain its power indefinitely.

 

Peter discovers the Club’s plans and sets out to stop them. He assumes a new persona, the cyborg Tom Paine, naming himself after the American revolutionary, and he and his friends infiltrate the Club’s secret compound, destroy missiles containing the nanobots and kill the Club’s leaders. Before Tom dies, his brain is uploaded into cyberspace and becomes the first fully autonomous, self-conscious, artificial human intelligence (AHI), known as Major Tom after David Bowie’s song. Major Tom exposes the secrets and plans of the Club to the public.

 

Manney’s second book (Id)entity describes the political disintegration of the United States after the Phoenix Club is exposed, and the struggle between a resurgent Club and groups like Major Tom’s that strive to stay independent. Most state governments  have dissolved. Some large cities, like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco govern themselves loosely. Other groups form offshore or deep ocean, self-sustaining colonies called sea steads that use cryptocurrencies like bitcoin.

 

The AHI Major Tom used hidden servers in New Zealand and elsewhere to support his group of scientists, programmers, hackers, doctors and other followers. In a fatal mistake, Tom created AHIs of the two dead leaders of the Phoenix Club, Carver and Josiah Brandt, to converse with. Their AHIs escaped their confinement from Major Tom’s virtual Memory Place and reconstituted the Phoenix Club.

 

The Club reunited several southern states into the Southern States of America (SSA). The SSA revised history by destroying records and altering videos and other computer files to show Peter Bernhardt, Tom Paine and Major Tom causing death, destruction and chaos. Advanced nano and computer technology created insect-sized, video cameras for surveillance and contact lenses that changed what a person saw from real-life squalor to a virtual suburban bliss. The SSA used swarms of drones armed with lasers and machine guns and frenzied, brainwashed mobs to expand its territory.

 

Major Tom and the Phoenix Club’s AHIs needed physical bodies on the ground. Technology enabled both groups to create cyborgs out of robots originally designed as sexbots and the bodies of recently deceased humans. The robots and cyborgs could be in continuous contact with the AHIs.

 

An independent sea stead in the Pacific Ocean was mysteriously destroyed and the dark web’s superstar of false identities and Major Tom’s ally, Dr. Who, was kidnapped. The SSA lures the decommissioned destroyer Zumwalt with Major Tom’s cyborg and his top hacker and the hospital ship Savior into Port Everglades, Florida. Thousands gather at the port fleeing an SSA onslaught hoping for places on the ships. Armed SSA drones slaughter hundreds, but videos are altered to show Major Tom’s cyborg orchestrating the massacre. Most of the world now sees Major Tom’s group as the villains.

 

In book three (CON)science, the SSA creates multiple AHIs of Peter Bernhardt. Their memories are manipulated to accept the SSA’s version of history that the original human Peter Bernhardt, cyborg Tom Paine and AHI Major Tom overthrew the legitimate U.S. government and caused the chaos and death that followed. The SSA instructs its AHIs to create war games to simulate a doomsday attack against Major Tom’s group if it attacks the SSA.

 

The SSA chooses its most naïve and gullible AHI to make a trial run of its game. Unbeknownst to the AHI, actual attacks against major East and West Coast cities begin. Explosives planted by human infiltrators, soldiers and drones destroy infrastructure and kill thousands of people. At universities like Stanford, MIT, Caltech and the University. of Chicago, faculty and students are arrested or killed.

 

The Phoenix Club’s resurgence and victory are almost complete. Only a few of Major Tom’s team remain on the Zumwalt. They face monumental tasks: 1. convince others that the SSA’s version of history is false, 2. rescue captured team members, 3. protect persons fleeing from SSA massacres, 4. convince China to help or at least be neutral in the conflict, and 5. finally destroy the Club despite all of the humans, robots, cyborgs, AHI’ s and other resources it controls.

 

Many readers will find Manney’s novels interesting and relevant because they address contemporary problems. Autocrats and oligarchs can acquire political power and wealth by controlling the public’s access to information. Advances in computer science and the internet have made the influence of social media and control of news sources more effective. Given the rapid pace of breakthroughs in many scientific fields, the author’s nanobots, robots, cyborgs and AHI’s are not out-of-the-question in the near future.

 

Highly recommended

 

Contains: moderate gore, moderate graphic sex

 

Reviewed by Robert D. Yee

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Book Review: Constance by Matthew Fitzsimmons

cover art for Constance by Matthew Fitzsimmons

Constance by Matthew Fitzsimmons

Thomas & Mercer, 2021 (release date Sept. 1 2021)

ISBN: 9781542014274

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook ( Bookshop.org | Amazon.com )

 

Constance is an outstanding thriller written in the vein of Michael Crichton.  It’s extremely fast paced and  emotionally deep. Its version of Earth in the future is beautifully detailed, with a lot of thought put in to how technology may evolve in the next 15 years.  This is a “can’t miss” book, and it wouldn’t be surprising to see Hollywood snap it up, it would be perfect material for Christopher Nolan (Interstellar, Inception) to direct.

 

The backbone of the book centers on human cloning, but not for replacement parts.  It’s for cloning replacement human beings in the event of  their untimely deaths.  Anyone with a clone in stasis has to re-download their consciousness into the clone every thirty days.  If a person dies, the clone is activated and the only memory lag should be between the last “refresh” of the clone and their time of death.   The protagonist, Constance D’Arcy, has a clone, a gift from her eccentric and very rich aunt.  When Constance wakes from her latest refresh, she learns she is not Constance, but Constance’s clone, just activated after 18 months of the original Constance being missing.  The clone (called “Con” here to eliminate confusion) is quickly on the run for her life, as various parties want her for… something.  It’s a complex puzzle for Con to learn what Constance was up to in the last 18 months, and how it relates to her being hunted by the various antagonists in the story.

 

Any more would spoil the plot, but it’s enough to say this is an incredible novel.  The characters are perfectly done and filled with depth, the thrills never stop, and the puzzle is a tough one to unravel as you read it.  Also, the science is explained well enough that the average reader won’t get overwhelmed.  Like the movie Inception, there are layers to the story, in terms of clones… and their clones… and the consciousness of some characters cloned into completely new bodies unrelated to the original.  It might be a lot to handle, but the author’s clear style keeps it easy to follow for the reader.  It helps make the story great, as the reader will never know for sure who a character actually is, until the author reveals it.  In the hands of a less talented author this could have been a labyrinthine mess, but Fitzsimmons pulls it off to perfection.

 

Fitzsimmons also does an excellent job painting some of the ethical and political problems of cloning into the story.  Different viewpoints on cloning are expressed through characters that are essential to the story.  The push/pull dynamic between the characters and their viewpoints on cloning adds depth to the story without controlling the narrative, and it is extremely well done.

 

Simply put, anyone who loves a good story has to get this one when it is released.  For a thriller, it doesn’t get any better than this.  Highly recommended.

 

Contains: profanity, mild violence

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

Book Review: Unchosen by Katharyn Blair

cover art for Unchosen by Katharyn Blair

Unchosen by Katharyn Blair

Katherine Tegen Books, 2021

ISBN-13 : 978-0062657640

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook  ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

 

Two years ago, the world was cursed with an infection that spread through direct eye contact, turning the infected into bloodthirsty, cannibalistic killers whose personalities and intelligence degrade over time, leaving only the monster behind. An infected person can gain immunity if they look directly into the eyes of three uninfected people, meaning there is a huge market for uninfected people. I thought this was a creative, unusual idea for spreading and controlling the infection.

The infection was caused by the defiling of the remains of Anne de Graaf, a young woman who cursed a pirate captain and jumped to her death rather than allowing her body to be claimed. Her remains were discovered and treasure hunters attempted to rob her body, activating the curse. According to prophecy, only the Chosen One can end the curse (why this infection is the curse is unclear to me, but Blair does such a vivid job creating her apocalyptic world that it didn’t really matter to me).

Harlow, Charlotte, and Vanessa are sisters, living in a survival camp and attempting to avoid the notice of raiders and infected, or Vessels. Harlow, the oldest, is nineteen, attractive, athletic, musical, and a leader in the camp. She’s also the long-term girlfriend of Dean, Charlotte’s crush. Vanessa, the youngest, is a talented gymnast and also the Chosen One, something that’s kept very carefully under wraps. She has night terrors and makes prophecies in her sleep. Charlotte shares a bedroom with her and writes them down. Raiders searching for the Chosen One discover the camp. They know she is there, but not which sister. To protect her sisters, Charlotte claims to be the Chosen One. The other members of the camp, including Dean, Harlow, and Vanessa, are led to a different ship that will take them to the Blood Market to be sold.

Thus begins a series of terrifying adventures mostly based in Charlotte’s memories of Vanessa’s prophecies, some lucky breaks, and a lot of lies. Charlotte uses her status as “Chosen One” to manipulate those who have grown to consider her an ally, including a potential romantic partner, Seth, into her search for Dean rather than aiming straight for the area she will need to get to in order to break the curse.

Charlotte is resourceful and convincing, but she’s also selfish, and her inability to ever follow directions, even when it’s a life-threatening situation for herself or others, is maddening. Her treatment of both Seth and Dean was frustrating to watch, and the message of women claiming their power for themselves was undercut by Charlotte’s continual search for Dean and the back-and-forth with Seth, who clearly respects her much more than she respects him.

There’s also a science fiction aspect to the story. One of the characters, a virologist, is seeking a cure for the infection. The combination of “infection caused by a curse” and “infection cured using science” begs the question of what kind of story is this, really? If science is the cure, why is there a need for a Chosen One?

Despite its flaws, this is an enjoyable colorful, action-packed apocalyptic story with a little romance that teen girls 12 and older will probably enjoy.

 

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski