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Can humankind be saved from itself before it's too late? ALT offers a glimpse into a perilous near-future version of our world-one we feared would come for us but desperately tried to ignore. Civilization has entered a nearly irrevocable downward spiral following a history of misguided priorities and the corrosive effects of unchecked greed, political polarization, our reckless dependence on fossil fuels, and a flagrant disregard for the importance of maintaining a harmonic balance with nature. Our last hopes lie in Sundance-a radical new technology aimed at harnessing solar energy through artificial photosynthesis-but time is running out. Sundance's original design was destroyed under suspicious circumstances along with its inventor, Augustus Smith. An intrepid band of scientists attempting to resurrect the project have called upon Augustus's son, Theo Smith, a brilliant computer scientist, to help-but dark forces threaten to stand in the way. At its core, ALT is a warning about what awaits us if we fail to rein in our worst impulses and examine the unintended consequences of technological development, and ignore the signs of a planet in crisis. It's also a plea for change-so we can hand down a better version of the world to future generations.… (plus d'informations)
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4 sur 4
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Thank you LibraryThing and Aleksander Nedeljovik for the ARC of ALT. For me, this was a new and challenging sort of read in the way it bravely dived into technology and explained things beyond my level of skill. It found that intriguing alone. The story itself dived deep into a very possible near future world where the energy crisis has reached a new and dangerous level threatening the existence of humanity. Of course the elite are more focused on themselves. (Sound like fiction or no?)
As we follow Theo on his journey to complete the project his father started, to restore peace among the people, tensions rise- especially with how close to home it all hits. Will the human race survive? Can they make the right decisions for the world we know?
  Araskov | Nov 25, 2022 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
This feels like it's three books crammed into one. Lots of backstory, lots of characters, also falls victim to a common sci-fi problem of exposition at the expense of fluidity and action. I also disagree with some of the author's ideas (which might as well be labeled as such, coming as they usually do in large blocks of exposition) about what would happen in the aftermath of major disasters. No spoilers here, but the appearance of blockchain and related jargon also gets on some very particular nerves of mine. I did appreciate the apparent homage to the Sid Meier Civilization games, since I used to play the first two of those a lot.

I don't generally think that sci-fi or other fiction needs to be written in multiple volumes, but this book is an exception. The domestic and foreign political situation could be one, the environmental/material science stuff could be a second, and the mystery aspect could potentially be a third, or wound into the other two, or something else besides. Having all of it in one book with a bunch of other exposition added in is a lot. ( )
  Matthew1982 | Nov 12, 2022 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Another dystopian story but a good one at that. Held my attention from the start. A bit slow at times but nonetheless an all around great debut. ( )
  dbachan | Nov 7, 2022 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Slow and meandering lacking sufficient pace for the plot it tries to build, but not without merit. I think the main problem is too large a cast of characters that have little interaction until quite late in the story. The technology is given a long exposition, but then abandoned for the rest of the novel before being briefly picked up in the epilogue. As a macGuffin to hang the story around it too needs better foundations, a more likely concept, and some form of intersection with the rest of the story.

The basic premise is believable enough - oil extraction has already run climate change into the danger zones, but a significant proportion of the world continues Business as Usual, wringing the last drops of blood form the Goldern Goose, even as society breaks down and only the most ruthless corporations and their hit teams survive. A scientist/Engineer develops a novel photo-synthesis based solar panel, but then before the invention is publicised he and his lab are burnt down (probably by an Oil based consortium). Knowing that it's now possible a rival corporation are trying to retro-engineer such a work by hiring his family, whilst another company work on abiotic oil substitute (nominally carbon neutral but I think probably not), and they're also interested in the same people although the problems should be very different. A child escapes a kidnapping and is accompanied by one of the firm's 'problem solvers'. The kid plays in a global online tournament based on the Sid Meyer's Civilisation game, which doesn't add anything to the plot or make a lot of sense.

It's all just a bit too disorganised and not quite thought through. A little bit of tightening up and cutting would make this very good. ( )
  reading_fox | Oct 17, 2022 |
4 sur 4
“We need fiction that conveys alternative and utopian ideas like this one, as it can inspire individuals and communities – and ultimately help shed some light in the face of crises such as climate change.”
ajouté par AleksandarN | modifierearth.org, Maria Mendez (Apr 18, 2022)
 
“With his debut novel ALT, Nedeljkovic has achieved a riveting, suspenseful science fiction tale full of twists and turns that will keep the reader guessing until the epic conclusion.”
 
Aleksandar Nedeljkovic doesn't baby down the tech talk and writes in a style reminiscent of Tom Clancy, with a grip on the technology that does not require much suspension of disbelief and a “bells and missiles” approach to action. At its core, ALT is a science fiction thriller, and a distinctively good one at that.”
 
“An engrossing dystopian tale… Nedeljkovic excels at worldbuilding, creating a future that’s harrowing and plausible. A lengthy coda trails the climax, offering resolution for most of the cast and a sublime ending.”
ajouté par AleksandarN | modifierKirkus Reivews (Feb 22, 2022)
 
“A powerful saga that is hard to put down, spinning a realistic story of opportunity, anguish, and the fallout between individual sacrifice and social preservation.”
 
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A lot can happen in a second.
You can decide if you’re going to love someone for the rest of your life inside of a second.
It’s enough time to recognize an idea that can lift up a civilization or start a war that will destroy countless lives.
It’s about how long it takes the AI mind of Newseam Neural Network to construct a tailored news story to fit a headline like this one: The Systems That Aren’t Busy Being Born Are Busy Dying.
A second is a measure of singularity closest to zero in which the past, present, and future are all contained as one, where what has been, what is now, and what might be, can still change one another.
The human condition is a struggle with natural forces from birth until death. Everything we have achieved so far as a species exists because we wrestled it from nothingness with our bare hands, our will, and our intellect. The hard way. But nature is still a great, dangerous mystery to us only because we often perceive it as an adversary, something outside ourselves, something to conquer and overcome. We will not be able to understand it fully and be one with it until we start obeying its laws. The truth is, we have already been given everything we’d ever need to sustain our precious opportunity to exist on this planet. We just have to attune ourselves with the divine harmony of nature and reap the benefits. Every single day, the sun sends us a gift of limitless power, more than we’ll ever need for any task imaginable. Our only challenge is to properly harness it.
Getting a second chance at life is a precious gift, one of those that would be a sin to let go to waste, a rare opportunity to let your mind wander off beyond the limits of comprehension and drift unhinged among the impregnable questions that populate the thin-air metaphysics of life and death. And if you’re lucky, you’ll understand that you won’t find any answers up there because soon enough your mind will crash back down into the thick mud of quotidian ignorance and, like a lost dog eager to please with the one trick it knows well, it’ll be back to waddling in the simple reality it’s built for—and you’ll find yourself entangled in the mundane comings and goings of everyday life again, reconciled with your insignificance, hoping that the brutal realization that the sun will rise in the morning with or without you won’t be that painful anymore. Whatever time you get is luck. Now, tomorrow, or twenty years from today, your few cosmic nanoseconds of existence will come to an end and what was you once becomes something else, a speck of ash, a momentary flicker in the evening sky.
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Can humankind be saved from itself before it's too late? ALT offers a glimpse into a perilous near-future version of our world-one we feared would come for us but desperately tried to ignore. Civilization has entered a nearly irrevocable downward spiral following a history of misguided priorities and the corrosive effects of unchecked greed, political polarization, our reckless dependence on fossil fuels, and a flagrant disregard for the importance of maintaining a harmonic balance with nature. Our last hopes lie in Sundance-a radical new technology aimed at harnessing solar energy through artificial photosynthesis-but time is running out. Sundance's original design was destroyed under suspicious circumstances along with its inventor, Augustus Smith. An intrepid band of scientists attempting to resurrect the project have called upon Augustus's son, Theo Smith, a brilliant computer scientist, to help-but dark forces threaten to stand in the way. At its core, ALT is a warning about what awaits us if we fail to rein in our worst impulses and examine the unintended consequences of technological development, and ignore the signs of a planet in crisis. It's also a plea for change-so we can hand down a better version of the world to future generations.

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Le livre ALT de Aleksandar Nedeljkovic était disponible sur LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

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Aleksandar Nedeljkovic est un auteur LibraryThing, c'est-à-dire un auteur qui catalogue sa bibliothèque personnelle sur LibraryThing.

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