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    Wild Blood

    Wild Blood

    Games and Entertainment

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    Optimized for the 4-inch Retina display on iPhone 5. Gameloft has harnessed the power of the...

    DEVICE 6

    DEVICE 6

    Games and Book

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    ** Winner of Apple Design Award 2014 ** A surreal thriller in which the written word is your map,...

Autonomous: A Novel
Autonomous: A Novel
Annalee Newitz | 2017 | Science Fiction/Fantasy
7
7.0 (1 Ratings)
Book Rating
Autonomous is an interesting story that poses a lot of moral questions. It doesn't really take sides; both the pharmaceutical pirate and the agents tracking her down are painted in sympathetic ways, as if we're meant to like them all. We see why Jack is a pharmaceutical pirate; medicine is only available to those rich enough to pay for it, so the poor stay poor and sick and short-lived. She wants to change that. She reverse-engineers drugs, manufactures them, and distributes them to the needy through her associates.

Meanwhile, Eliasz is a conflicted military agent who is sexually attracted to robots. Or at least to his partner, Paladin, though a flashback shows what might have been the start of his attraction to robots. Paladin is probably the single most interesting character in the entire book, as she muses on the nature of being indentured, and searches through her memories and the internet for information about her situation.

The book does have LGBT content - Jack is bisexual, and Eliasz is - robosexual? Is that a thing? Paladin could be called nonbinary or trans; she repeatedly mentions that gender isn't a thing to robots, but because she's a military robot, most people call her a he at the beginning of the book. She learns the brain inside her is female, and to make Eliasz more comfortable with his attraction, she decides to use female pronouns. Eliasz does use the F word to refer to himself being attracted to the robot at the beginning, when they were using male pronouns. This puzzles Paladin for a while, causing her to search the term and figure out what Eliasz meant by its use.

There's a lot of complex world-building in this book that is barely brushed past. From the corporations who own patents covering everything, to the system of indenture that covers humans as well as robots, to the bio-domes that cover cities (but it's livable outside the biodomes, so why are they needed?), to the new federations that cover continents that used to be divided into several countries - there's a LOT going on. And there's not just robots, but also some pretty advanced cybernetics implanted in humans as well as an everpresent network of data that can be tapped into with implants that everyone has.

Ultimately, for as complex as the world is, and cohesive as the plot is, I'm left wondering who, if anyone, was in the right in this story. I'm not sure if we're supposed to be happy with the ending or not. I've seen other reviews saying Neuromancer was a way better book in a similar vein, and I actually have copy of that waiting to be read. So we'll see.

You can find all my reviews at http://goddessinthestacks.com
  
    THE aMAZEing Labyrinth

    THE aMAZEing Labyrinth

    Games and Entertainment

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    ***** The iPad version of "THE aMAZEing Labyrinth HD" is winner of the "Deutscher Computerspielpreis...

    WolframAlpha

    WolframAlpha

    Reference and Education

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    Remember the Star Trek computer? It's finally happening--with Wolfram|Alpha. Building on 25 years of...

    Year Walk

    Year Walk

    Games and Entertainment

    4.7 (3 Ratings) Rate It

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    In the old days man tried to catch a glimpse of the future in the strangest of ways. Experience the...

    Disney Color and Play

    Disney Color and Play

    Entertainment and Education

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    Now you can color and play with Lightning McQueen from the upcoming Disney•Pixar film Cars 3! Join...