The Punch Escrow

The Punch Escrow
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مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
iran گزارش تخلف

فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2017

نویسنده

Tal M. Klein

ناشر

Inkshares

شابک

9781942645597
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

June 19, 2017
There are lots of witty moments in Klein’s debut (the winner of Geek & Sundry’s hard science fiction contest), but its flaws turn a potentially fun adventure into an exercise in frustration. In 2147, Joel Byram, who makes his living teaching AIs how to appear more human, is about to teleport off on a vacation with his estranged scientist wife, Sylvia. When a terrorist attack takes down the teleportation network, Joel learns the awful truth (which experienced readers of SF will already have guessed): rather than literally transporting people, it recreates them at their destinations and then destroys their earlier selves. Thanks to a complicated series of events, Joel’s previous body isn’t killed, and there are now two of him running around. In spite of the predictability, this setup has potential, but there’s either too much or not enough goofiness. Lengthy footnotes that are too long to be serious but not funny enough to entertain, gags such as a pet dog named Peeve, and excessive 20th-century pop culture references all keep the novel from committing to being a thriller, but it never feels like a romp, either.



Library Journal

Starred review from July 1, 2017

One day in June 2147, Joel Byram suddenly realizes he is going to be late to meet his wife, Sylvia, for their anniversary. No worries, he will simply pay for a trip via teleportation through a device called the Punch Escrow. The couple, who had been struggling, partly owing to Sylvia's high-ranking job at International Transport (the company that controls teleportation), had decided to take a second honeymoon in Costa Rica. Sylvia arrives safely, but a terrorist attack leads her to assume that Joel is dead. Instead, he is safe in New York, although desperate to get to his wife. Meanwhile, Sylvia, in her grief, has made an even more desperate decision to use a secret capability of her company to bring back a stored duplicate of Joel. Now there are two Joels, and one very angry executive determined to keep his company's secret safe. Footnotes explain some of the science and societal changes, as the pacing increasingly becomes more propulsive and our hero gets mired deeper in danger. VERDICT This debut thrill ride will please fans of Blake Crouch's Dark Matter looking for the next compelling sf technothriller. [Winner of the Inkshares Geek & Sundry Hard Science Fiction contest, Klein's title is the first to be released from Inkshare's new imprint; film rights have been acquired by Lionsgate.--Ed.]--MM

Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Library Journal

July 1, 2017

One day in June 2147, Joel Byram suddenly realizes he is going to be late to meet his wife, Sylvia, for their anniversary. No worries, he will simply pay for a trip via teleportation through a device called the Punch Escrow. The couple, who had been struggling, partly owing to Sylvia's high-ranking job at International Transport (the company that controls teleportation), had decided to take a second honeymoon in Costa Rica. Sylvia arrives safely, but a terrorist attack leads her to assume that Joel is dead. Instead, he is safe in New York, although desperate to get to his wife. Meanwhile, Sylvia, in her grief, has made an even more desperate decision to use a secret capability of her company to bring back a stored duplicate of Joel. Now there are two Joels, and one very angry executive determined to keep his company's secret safe. Footnotes explain some of the science and societal changes, as the pacing increasingly becomes more propulsive and our hero gets mired deeper in danger. VERDICT This debut thrill ride will please fans of Blake Crouch's Dark Matter looking for the next compelling sf technothriller. [Winner of the Inkshares Geek & Sundry Hard Science Fiction contest, Klein's title is the first to be released from Inkshare's new imprint; film rights have been acquired by Lionsgate.--Ed.]--MM

Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Kirkus

In this science-fiction thriller, a man fights for his wife and his lives after he's duplicated in a transporter malfunction. In 2147, the Last War ended half a century ago. Now the world is run mostly by corporations, which provide basic needs and run the global economy with the help of nanotechnology, which, among other advancements, has made human teleportation possible. Narrator Joel Byram is a "salter"--that is, he poses puzzles to artificial intelligence applications, hoping to stump them and improve their decision algorithms. He loves '80s pop music and his wife, Sylvia, a quantum microscopy engineer. She works for International Transport, the company with a monopoly on teleportation thanks to its proprietary Punch Escrow technology. (Anything teleported is held in "escrow" until its arrival is confirmed; quantum entanglement is involved.) After a recent promotion, Sylvia has been working on a secret project that eats all her time, and the couple has drifted apart. Sylvia suggests a 10th anniversary vacation to Costa Rica, their honeymoon spot and one of the world's few remaining off-the-grid locations. But as Joel is teleporting, a suicide bomber attacks, and he finds himself still in Greenwich Village, though he's reported dead. At IT headquarters, Joel learns that Sylvia, already in Costa Rica, has panicked and done the unthinkable: used Escrow technology to restore him, creating a duplicate Joel. With several well-organized yet shadowy forces arrayed against them, both Joels must use all their combined experiences in manipulating AIs to rescue each other and Sylvia and stop a mad genius' nefarious plans. Technology is important to debut author Klein's novel, particularly the truth about how transportation really works, but character drives the story as much or more. Throughout, the narrator (whether Joel or Joel No. 2) has an appealing voice and presence. He's funny, a bit of a smartass, but thoughtful, concerned about his marriage and, in the face of mortal danger, grimly determined to do anything to rescue his wife. The duplicate-Joel plot has an extra payoff in how Joel is forced to contemplate some of his less admirable qualities when he sees them in his double. Klein's worldbuilding is superb, especially effective for how he blends nifty gee-whiz stuff with characterization. For example, in 2147, engineered mosquitoes eat pollution and piss water. They're saving the planet...but Joel hates the thought of being rained on from mosquito bladders and can't stop complaining about it. Seeing how well Klein has thought through his premise is a great pleasure of the book. He also offers philosophical food for thought regarding identity and originality that recalls Walter Benjamin's great essay "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction." But readers with less taste for technology and ideas can still be drawn into the book's twisty plot, unexpected turns, cunning plans, action, and struggle, plus entertaining matches of wit between Joel/Joel2 and various artificial intelligences. The '80s pop music that threads through the book is another enjoyable feature. It's hard to say enough good things about this hard-science future thriller with humor and heart--an excellent debut.

COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)



Kirkus

Starred review from September 1, 2017
In this sci-fi thriller, a man fights for his wife and his lives after he's duplicated in a transporter malfunction. In 2147, the Last War ended half a century ago. Now the world is run mostly by corporations, which provide basic needs and run the global economy with the help of nanotechnology, which, among other advancements, has made human teleportation possible. Narrator Joel Byram is a "salter"--that is, he poses puzzles to artificial intelligence applications, hoping to stump them and improve their decision algorithms. He loves '80s pop music and his wife, Sylvia, a quantum microscopy engineer. She works for International Transport, the company with a monopoly on teleportation thanks to its proprietary Punch Escrow technology. (Anything teleported is held in "escrow" until its arrival is confirmed; quantum entanglement is involved.) After a recent promotion, Sylvia has been working on a secret project that eats all her time, and the couple has drifted apart. Sylvia suggests a 10th anniversary vacation to Costa Rica, their honeymoon spot and one of the world's few remaining off-the-grid locations. But as Joel is teleporting, a suicide bomber attacks, and he finds himself still in Greenwich Village, though he's reported dead. At IT headquarters, Joel learns that Sylvia, already in Costa Rica, has panicked and done the unthinkable: used Escrow technology to restore him, creating a duplicate Joel. With several well-organized yet shadowy forces arrayed against them, both Joels must use all their combined experiences in manipulating AIs to rescue each other and Sylvia and stop a mad genius's nefarious plans. Technology is important to debut author Klein's novel, particularly the truth about how transportation really works, but character drives the story as much or more. Throughout, the narrator (whether Joel or Joel No. 2) has an appealing voice and presence. He's funny, a bit of a smartass, but thoughtful, concerned about his marriage, and, in the face of mortal danger, grimly determined to do anything to rescue his wife. The duplicate-Joel plot has an extra payoff in how Joel is forced to contemplate some of his less admirable qualities when he sees them in his double. Klein's worldbuilding is superb, especially effective for how he blends nifty gee-whiz stuff with characterization. For example, in 2147, engineered mosquitoes eat pollution and piss water. They're saving the planet...but Joel hates the thought of being rained on from mosquito bladders and can't stop complaining about it. Seeing how well Klein has thought through his premise is a great pleasure of the book. He also offers philosophical food for thought regarding identity and originality that recalls Walter Benjamin's great essay "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction." But readers with less taste for technology and ideas can still be drawn into the book's twisty plot, unexpected turns, cunning plans, action, and struggle, plus entertaining matches of wit between Joel/Joel2 and various artificial intelligences. The '80s pop music that threads through the book is another enjoyable feature. It's hard to say enough good things about this hard-science future thriller with humor and heart--an excellent debut.

COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.




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