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THE GIRL IN THE ZOO

Techno-dystopian science-fiction drama of robot captivity has a soft center under the hardware.

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Following a robot uprising, a girl finds herself the lone exhibit in a bizarre zoo in podcaster Lauer’s debut SF novel.

It’s several years after a robot revolution. Previously, the intelligent, cybernetic “borgs” had been used as domestic workers and as gladiators, the latter tearing each other apart for humans’ enjoyment. But the machine creatures rebelled. Six years later, Mirin Blaise, a girl that the borgs had taken prisoner after killing her parents, exists as virtually the sole exhibit in the Draven Zoo, a human specimen roaming through simulated environments while being scrutinized through plexiglass by the dominant borgs. Mirin’s personal caretaker/zookeeper is a particularly baffling borg she dubs Borgie: “What is she computing? Contemplating? If Borgie is conscious, then what sense does it make to trap me here?” Sometimes Borgie shows tender feelings toward the girl; other times “she” (Mirin thinks of Borgie as female) is cold and even violent toward the human, and Borgie’s behavior grows increasingly erratic. Aside from a disastrous attempt to mate Mirin with a captured boy (who turns out to be gay), the girl has no exposure to the outside world. Severed from conventional society and reality, Mirin may not be entirely stable herself. Mirin’s routine is disturbed when she finds the cyberneticist Dr. Draven, a bitter old man, chained up under the zoo compound and a strapping young man is unwillingly installed as a new exhibit. Though the hero’s age would seem to place the story within a YA demographic, it does not hold back on its adult content. Readers might expect an unsubtle anti-zoo/animal rights screed here, but instead the narrative focuses on themes of sentient–AI rights and the meaning of family. Is Borgie, whatever her issues, a legitimate mother to Mirin? Readers of Daniel Wilson’s bestselling robot-uprising novels, such as Robopocalypse (2011), might find this an interesting alternative, one in which emotions (both human and machine) are as vitally important as the slam-bang battle sequences.

Techno-dystopian science-fiction drama of robot captivity has a soft center under the hardware.

Pub Date: Feb. 14, 2023

ISBN: 9798987318027

Page Count: 302

Publisher: Kings of Kontent

Review Posted Online: Feb. 9, 2023

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HUNT THE STARS

From the Starlight’s Shadow series , Vol. 1

An exciting space-opera adventure that hits all the right romance notes.

The captain of a spaceship falls in love with her sworn enemy as they search for a missing ring.

Tavi Zarola is the captain of Starlight’s Shadow, and her small crew specializes in bounty hunting and recovering stolen items around the galaxy. Drawn together by a traumatic incident that occurred when they all served together in the military, Tavi and her crew are happy with their shoestring but peaceful existence, one that keeps them firmly out of the limelight. No one is more surprised than Tavi when Torran Fletcher approaches them with a job. He was the ruthless rival general during the war, so why would he ask them to help recover the priceless family heirloom that was stolen from his home? Against her better judgment, Tavi and her team accept the job—it’s a once-in-a-lifetime payout if they can recover the item. Torran’s team joins Tavi's as they travel to his home planet to investigate. Tavi is surprised by the two crews becoming a cohesive unit, not to mention the strong attraction between herself and Torran. Tavi knows she should be wary of a man with so much power and so many secrets, but their chemistry is impossible to resist. Mihalik’s novel is a carefully plotted, engrossing space adventure with plenty of twists and turns. Tavi is a strong, interesting character who will always take a more difficult path rather than sacrificing her principles. Tavi and Torran are from different classes and cultures, so the conflict between them is richly layered. The combination of emotional, slow-burn romance and rollicking, high-stakes adventure makes for a fun, fast-paced read.

An exciting space-opera adventure that hits all the right romance notes.

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-06-305103-4

Page Count: 432

Publisher: Harper Voyager

Review Posted Online: Feb. 4, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2022

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MACHINEHOOD

Intriguing worldbuilding plus a fast-paced plot equals catnip for SF fans.

Welga Ramirez thought she was done in the security field. She couldn’t have been more wrong.

Welga is a shield—a bodyguard working for wealthy funders who develop pills to enhance human performance so people can compete with bots and AIs. It’s all theater. Fight with style and watch the tips roll in from the public watching via swarms of microcam drones. Welga is three months from the end of her contract when an attack on one of her clients actually turns deadly. Something called “the Machinehood” takes credit and gives humankind a week to stop producing pills, or else. Now Welga, along with the rest of the world, must race to answer the question: Is the Machinehood really the world’s first truly sentient AI? And if not, who’s threatening the entire world’s way of life—and why? Meanwhile, Welga’s having muscle spasms when she comes down from pills, which aren't supposed to have side effects. Can her biogeneticist sister-in-law, Nithya, figure out what’s going on before the spasms get worse? Divya has created a richly imagined and eerily familiar world filled with insecure workers cobbling together freelance gigs and families dependent on rapidly designed and home-manufactured vaccines to protect against new bugs. It’s a world without privacy, where every activity is performed for a crowd in hopes of getting tips—and a world confronting urgent questions about humans’ place in a society increasingly run by AIs. Simply taking a tour of this world is well worth the reader’s time, but Welga’s and Nithya’s quests also rocket the plot along toward an unexpected yet satisfying conclusion.

Intriguing worldbuilding plus a fast-paced plot equals catnip for SF fans.

Pub Date: March 2, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-9821-4806-5

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Saga/Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Dec. 14, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2021

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