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No.19743
>>19741
Только что, между >>19739 и >>19740 постами, зарегался на www.flibusta.net
>Дэниэл Суарес, консультант по программному обеспечению из Лос-Анджелеса, послал свой техно-триллер «Daemon» 48 литагентам. Все без толку. Ну так он взял и опубликовал его сам. Помаленечку, потихонечку блогеры рассказывали друг другу об этом «Daemon» - и таки распробовали его. Кончилось тем, что оживление вокруг романа заметил Random House – и купил его, вместе с сиквелом, за несколько сотен тысяч. «Я правду думаю, что будущее за теми, кто так и поступает», - говорит Суарес. «Агентства будут отслеживать результаты продаж книг, опубликованных за счет автора, наблюдать за естественным отбором, на манер дарвиновского. Будут выживать сильнейшие. Толпа будет сама решать, чью рукопись ей принять».
>Daemon is an ambitious novel, which sets out not only to entertain, which it surely does, but also to challenge the reader to consider social issues as broad as the implications of living in a technologically advanced world and whether democracy can survive in such a world.
>The storyline portrays one possible world consequent to the development of the technological innovations that we currently live with and the reality that the author, Suarez, imagines will evolve, and it is chilling and tense (on www.thedaemon.com the reader can find evidence that the seemingly incredible advances Suarez proposes could in fact become real). Daemon is filled with multiple scenes involving power displays by the Daemon's allies resulting in complete loss of control by its enemies, violence with new and innovative weaponry, explosions, car crashes, blood, guts, and limbs-cut-off galore.
>As far as computer complexity, Daemon will satisfy any computer geek's thirst. I was thankful for Pete Sebeck, the detective in the book whose average-person understanding of computers necessitates an occasional explanation about what is going on. I came away from the novel with a new understanding, respect, and fear of computer capability.
>In the end, Suarez invites the reader to enter the "second age of reason," to think about where recent and imminent advances in computer technology are taking us and whether we want to go there. For me, it is this "thinking" aspect of the novel which makes it a particularly fun, satisfying, and significant read.
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