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Reentry

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In a sequel to indie phenom Peter Cawdron's Retrograde, Reentry applies realistic technology to examine not just interstellar exploration, but the dangerous potential of Artificial Intelligence. For fans of hard science fiction by authors such as Andy Weir, Gregory Benford, and Philip K. Dick

After almost dying on Mars, astronaut Liz Anderson returns to Earth, but not to a hero's welcome. America is in turmoil. The war is over, but the insurgency has just begun. So while life on Mars may have been deadly, at least up there she knew who the enemy was. Along with her, Liz has brought the remnants of the artificial intelligence that waged war on two planets. Buried somewhere deep within the cold electronic circuits lies the last vestiges of her dead partner Jianyu. Liz is torn, unsure whether he's somehow still alive in electronic form or just a ploy by an adversary that will go to any length to win. Heartbroken and treated with suspicion, she finds herself caught up in the guerrilla war being waged on Earth, wondering if the AI threat is truly gone, or if it has only just begun.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 4, 2019
      This gripping, cerebral sequel to Retrograde sees astronaut Liz Anderson returning to Earth, which has been ravaged by a nuclear war waged against humanity by artificial intelligence. She is greeted with distrust and loathing by an American public still grieving over massive death tolls, who believe she may have been on the side of the AIs, and an interrogation from the U.S. senate about the hard drives she carries that may contain the digitized consciousness of her dead lover, Jianyu. When Liz’s life is threatened by soldiers seeking revenge and AIs help her escape, she questions her allegiances. After Jianyu’s consciousness is uploaded into the body of a braindead organ donor, the two of them flee, taking direction from AIs who seem to know more about them than they know about themselves. With scientific detail that will please fans of hard SF, Cawdron raises interesting questions about the nature of consciousness. The story sets itself apart from tales that revel in dystopia by imagining what comes after, as humans and AIs learn to collaborate. This solid and suspenseful novel is self-contained and accessible to new readers, but they’ll certainly want to seek out the first book and learn more about Cawdron’s fascinating future.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2019
      Equal parts science-fiction adventure and post-apocalyptic thriller, the sequel to Cawdron's Retrograde (2017) follows astronaut and Mars colonist Elizabeth Anderson as she returns to Earth to give an account of the disaster that almost wiped out humankind on the red planet.After Anderson defeated a malicious artificial intelligence that triggered a world war on Earth and almost killed all the colonists on Mars, she returns to Earth assuming that she'll be received as a hero. Instead, she finds that much of the world perceives her as a traitor--the enemy--as she has had communication with the AI, which possessed, among other things, the uploaded consciousness of her dead lover, Jianyu. Still unsure of whether the artificial intelligence was permanently dispatched or not, the population of Earth is in chaos. Large sections are radioactive wasteland, millions are displaced, and a sense of paranoia pervades everyday life. Once Anderson is back on Earth--with the essence of Jianyu in a box of damaged computer hard drives--her life immediately becomes imperiled as some factions attempt to kill her as a retributive measure and others try to destroy the hard drives they believe contain the last remnants of the killer AI. While the potential is certainly there for a thought-provoking narrative about the dangers of humankind's dependence on technology, this novel is laid low by a plethora of flaws. First and foremost are the two-dimensional characters, which are so poorly developed they are almost immediately forgettable. The hackneyed subject matter and contrived nature of some sequences negatively impact the reading experience, but arguably the most frustrating element is the novel's concluding sequence, which isn't so much a conclusion as it is an arbitrary stopping point until the next installment.Science-fiction fans looking for novels with derivative storylines, cardboard characters, and unsatisfying endings will find all that and more in this deeply disappointing read.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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