Cuarentena

eBook

Published Aug. 4, 1999

ISBN:
978-84-930663-0-7
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4 stars (2 reviews)

En 2034, las estrellas se apagaron. Un agente desconocido rodeó el sistema solar con una barrera impenetrable, ocultando el universo de la mirada de la humanidad.

En 2067, Nick Stavrianos es contratado para investigar la desaparición de una discapacitada mental, Laura Andrews, de la institución donde estaba siendo atendida. Ayudado por un cráneo lleno de modificaciones neuronales, sigue su rastro hasta la República de Nueva Hong Kong, donde una organización conocida como Ensemble ha descubierto el extraordinario secreto de Laura: una habilidad que podría transformar el mundo.

9 editions

Review of 'Quarantine' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Starts off as a detective novel, then expands into a larger world of nanotech, alien contact and world manipulation through quantum mechanics. Comparable to [b:The Lathe of Heaven|59924|The Lathe of Heaven|Ursula K. Le Guin|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1433084322l/59924.SX50.jpg|425872], with more specifics given on the engines behind manipulation. Le Guin's book has the better story, though.

This book has a lot going on in a short count of pages. Some force that has put out solar system into a kind of "bubble", a doomsday cult reacting to that event, nanotech and brain modifications similar to smartphone "apps", potential alien contact and the aforementioned quantum mechanical manipulations. I can see how tags like "cyberpunk" landed on it, but this really is more of a "what if" story focused on quantum states.

I can't say much about the ending without spoiling the story. The author freely admits one of his interpretations is wrong, discussing it …

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4 stars

Subjects

  • Ciencia Ficción