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Mars Adrift (The Halo Trilogy #3) par…
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Mars Adrift (The Halo Trilogy #3) (édition 2022)

par Kathleen McFall (Auteur), Clark Hays (Auteur)

Séries: The Halo Trilogy (3)

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
941,987,993 (4.5)3
THE ONLY PERSON LEFT ALIVE WHO CAN SAVE MARS AND EARTH HAS VANISHED. The year is (still) 2188 and Crucial Larsen is officially done with Mars. But just as he's set to head back to his beloved Earth, meteors crash into the orbital platforms, ravage the luxury domes and knock Halo--the powerful AI running Mars and Earth--offline. And this is no random cosmic event. An invading force has the technology to redirect space rocks at will and intends to level the Five Families. Their first act? Put a bounty on missing Staff Scientist Melinda Hopwire, Crucial's ex-lover and the only person left alive who can find the back-up servers to introduce the AI empathy hack, the endgame of the beleaguered Resistance. Crucial has to claw his way across the deadly Choke armed with nothing more than a glue gun, expired maple rum and Sanders, a malfunctioning cybanism, to find Mel and her synthetic perma-kitten Wisp. If he fails, it's the end for both planets. Mars Adrift is the third book in The Halo Trilogy, an irreverent series set on post-colonial Mars, and the tenth novel by Clark Hays and Kathleen McFall.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:readafew
Titre:Mars Adrift (The Halo Trilogy #3)
Auteurs:Kathleen McFall (Auteur)
Autres auteurs:Clark Hays (Auteur)
Info:Pumpjack Press (2022), 298 pages
Collections:Votre bibliothèque, À lire, Received for Review
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Mots-clés:Early Reviewers, The Halo Trilogy, #3

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Mars Adrift par Kathleen McFall

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» Voir aussi les 3 mentions

4 sur 4
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
What a magnificent trilogy this was. And this final book in the series was the best of the best. From the opening pages of book one, I fell into this world wholeheartedly and even after I turned the last page, I still didn't want to leave it. But what a fitting end to such a fantastic story. As a fan of hard sci-fi and also detective fiction and noir, I have to say this was an outstanding blend of both worlds. I won't attempt a quick synopsis, which wouldn't begin to suffice, nor will I give an in-depth rundown of the plot. Neither would do it justice. You'll just have to read these books for yourself to marvel at the plot, characterizations, dialogue and world-building. This is storytelling at its finest, no matter what genre it is. ***I received a copy of this book from the authors though a LibraryThing Early Reviewers Giveaway. My review is strictly voluntary.*** ( )
  DTChantel | Mar 28, 2022 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Although, this is the last book of a trilogy, it is also a standalone. I didn’t read the first two, and enjoyed it immensely. I may not know the characters as much if I had read the first two but the story was entertaining and faced paced. I am usually on the fence regarding science fiction stories and this one did not disappoint. It is about an attack on Marts about 160 years in the future where there is a colony controlled by the Five Families. Crucial Larson with the help a few does his best to save both Earth and Mars. It also takes place 50 years after that as his heroics re analyzed in a history class. Very interesting to say the least. Aside from all that it is also about love, friendship, commitment and more. I found all the characters intriguing and really liked the story. ( )
  grumpydan | Mar 15, 2022 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
4 stars, Conclusion, yet the story continues

MARS ADRIFT (THE HALO TRILOGY BOOK 3)
by Kathleen McFall & Clark Hays

This is the conclusion to the Halo Trilogy Series. Unfortunately, I did not read the other two books. This one is set up as a stand-alone, but you can tell while reading it, that if you'd read the other books, you'd have a better understanding of who's who and what's going on.

This is shelved as a science fiction novel, most of the action takes place on Mars. It's a story of friendship, loss, and devotion. The authors attempted to subtly use other words, instead of straight profanity, like most books these days. Some of that worked well, other words were too close to offensive words for me.

All in all, it was an entertaining read. I'll probably read it again.

I received a complimentary copy from #pumpjackpress and the authors. I was under no obligation to post a review. #sciencefiction #mystery #suspense #coverlove ( )
  HuberK | Mar 4, 2022 |
Imagine an environment where all humankind on Earth, Mars and beyond is connected through a vast all powerful computerized network . Contemplate a condition where all infants are fitted with ocular implants that constantly transmit and receive information to and from that very network, an entity known as Halo. There is no personal privacy. Everyone is exposed to the same data and you can’t turn it off or detach from it unless you literally rip your eye, the one with the OCD implant, from its socket. Every visual image, every spoken word, thought and emotion is recorded. Every recording can be accessed by those with high enough authority, and so can every live feed – in real time. This story is told, 50 years after the fact, from the point of view of two who have that authority – a human professor of history named Lauren Valentine and her partner, Sanders.

Sanders is an android or cybanism (cybernetic humanoid type). Through him, Valentine’s class of young history students literally relive the adventures of Crucial, Essential, Jynks, Mel and other rebels as they fight against a cruel invading force, led by the Hucksworths, a family who seeks control of Halo and all human life. Why are the Hucksworths so bound and determined to rule over everyone? As Crucial sees it, “Greed is like a dark form of emotional gravity, always pulling the worst behaviors out of people.” Greed is what has always motivated the ruling powers throughout history.

Personally, I don’t think humankind is ready for OCD’s. Most human minds would surely crack wide open from the constant stream of avatainment, advertising, shared memories and other invasive information causing a headspace of constant noise. But I’m sure there are those out there who are designing such systems for us right now. Some future generation will probably live it. I’m glad it won’t be me.

But I am very glad I read this book. It is an amazing forecast of future possibilities. Some, I’d be happy to see implemented while others, I truly hope humankind manages to steer clear of.

Of the 77,000 Texas authors currently out there, Kathleen McFall and Clark Hays are, without a doubt, my favorite Texas author duo. I truly wish I knew who wrote which sentence or paragraph in their thought-provoking analysis of humanity in the future years between 2188 and 2238. Philosophical contemplations emanate from them as smoothly as ENC (experiential neural correlate) pulses. Every word they write makes one think and think and think again. Mars Adrift – Book 3 of The Halo Trilogy is no disappointment. In fact, I literally could not put it down.

In 2022, we are just entering the Digilithic Era of The Halo Trilogy. In the Digilithic Era, according to McFall and Hays, social algorithms such as religion have lost their prominence in society – as morals become replaced by computer generated algorithms or ‘rules’. In this novel, these rules implement an unjust uniformity and uneasy stability for the citizens of Earth, as well as those of Mars. That is, until rogue human factors invariably introduce flaws into the unsympathetic computerized social system. The highly anticipated and hoped for result is a machine with the capability to empathize with human kind.

In our lifetime and especially in the very brief lifetime of our computerized world, the human factor has taken control of various aspects of a burgeoning social media, that started out full of humor, wit and intellect; and manipulated algorithms in order to force it to become a place so full of rules that it’s nearly no fun to play there any longer. When life is completely controlled and regimented; no matter how much avatainment may be immediately accessible; then there is no longer any real joy to any of it.

Come on, Melinda Hopwire…bring on the empathy hack. We need something like it now to save us from a potential future where everyone is at the mercy of a machine that has been programmed to preferentially assist society’s elites.

Oh, to live in a world where all information is available upon command, where life is full of every entertainment known to man, where everyone works at and for some grand design. . .where no one starves or suffers any maladies. Wouldn’t that utopia? It could be if there was a way to truly make everyone equal but there will never be a world where the rich don’t get richer and the poor don’t get poorer. There will always be individual human beings who will grab more for themselves and everyone else be damned. It’s a terrible quality of human nature.

If our foray into our own brave new world falls apart as quickly as it appears destined to, humans may never experience the things I’d like to see like quantum loop ships, space elevators, illuminating light foam, and med-booths. That would be quite a shame.

In the meantime, read this book. It is quite an eye-opener. ( )
1 voter sybrinad | Feb 14, 2022 |
4 sur 4
Imagine an environment where all humankind on Earth, Mars and beyond is connected through a vast all powerful computerized network . Contemplate a condition where all infants are fitted with ocular implants that constantly transmit and receive information to and from that very network, an entity known as Halo. There is no personal privacy. Everyone is exposed to the same data and you can’t turn it off or detach from it unless you literally rip your eye, the one with the OCD implant, from its socket. Every visual image, every spoken word, thought and emotion is recorded. Every recording can be accessed by those with high enough authority, and so can every live feed – in real time. This story is told, 50 years after the fact, from the point of view of two who have that authority – a human professor of history named Lauren Valentine and her partner, Sanders. Read More…
 

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McFall, Kathleenauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Hays, Clarkauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé

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THE ONLY PERSON LEFT ALIVE WHO CAN SAVE MARS AND EARTH HAS VANISHED. The year is (still) 2188 and Crucial Larsen is officially done with Mars. But just as he's set to head back to his beloved Earth, meteors crash into the orbital platforms, ravage the luxury domes and knock Halo--the powerful AI running Mars and Earth--offline. And this is no random cosmic event. An invading force has the technology to redirect space rocks at will and intends to level the Five Families. Their first act? Put a bounty on missing Staff Scientist Melinda Hopwire, Crucial's ex-lover and the only person left alive who can find the back-up servers to introduce the AI empathy hack, the endgame of the beleaguered Resistance. Crucial has to claw his way across the deadly Choke armed with nothing more than a glue gun, expired maple rum and Sanders, a malfunctioning cybanism, to find Mel and her synthetic perma-kitten Wisp. If he fails, it's the end for both planets. Mars Adrift is the third book in The Halo Trilogy, an irreverent series set on post-colonial Mars, and the tenth novel by Clark Hays and Kathleen McFall.

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