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In the 23rd Century, corporations have replaced nations, and executives have absolute rule. But when an underground enclave of independent workers threatens the system, executive Dominic Jedes must negotiate with them face to face.

336 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published July 27, 2004

31 people want to read

About the author

M.M. Buckner

9 books8 followers
Mary M. Buckner is a hard science fiction author with an M.A. in Creative Writing from Boston University. Her first novel, Hyperthought was a finalist for the Philip K. Dick award, and War Surf won the award in 2005.

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5 stars
7 (11%)
4 stars
19 (30%)
3 stars
25 (40%)
2 stars
4 (6%)
1 star
7 (11%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Scott Holstad.
Author 132 books97 followers
July 23, 2014
In a word: stupid. Stupid, stupid, stupid. The writing is awful, the characters hollow, and the plot is dumb. It's the 23rd century and mega-corporations called Coms rule the world. One of the biggest, ZahlenBank, is overseen by a dying man whose son, Dominic, is about to take over. Now, how much do you think one of the largest corporations of the 23rd century would be worth? Five hundred billion? A trillion? I think it would be a lot, whatever the number. So imagine my surprise when Dominic mentions, in a board meeting, a rusting submarine filled with 2,000 people that is owned by ZahlenBank and he expresses a desire to write them off by leaving them to whatever fate is in store for them -- in order to save two million dollars.... That's right -- chump change. And this sub ends up hurting the bottom line of the corporation, so he has to make a trip to the sub to negotiate with the people left there. HOW FRIGGIN' STUPID IS THAT PREMISE??? He's worried about the equivalent of a dime and his dying father is too? Sorry, I don't buy it. It's just too stupid for words. I didn't finish it and I certainly don't recommend it. Utter trash.
Profile Image for Macha.
1,012 reviews6 followers
May 26, 2012
4 stars. pretty straightforward stuff; reads nice and clean, no clutter. mildly interesting characters, well-portrayed. near-future dystopic. i'd give it a 3 & a half star rating: doesn't try to do much, hits its marks. except that, written in 2004, it perfectly predicts the actual 2009 crash, the worldview that made it, the banking practices, the end result. for a junk sf thriller, that's a pretty accurate extrapolation, i'd say, so points for that.
20 reviews
January 22, 2022
It's the future. Coms rule. Dominic Jedes is the president of the monopoly, ZalenBank.
He also has daddy issues and spends most of the book arguing with his father's computer ghost and whining about being his father's "flesh flunky." That seems to be the primary focus.

TLDR: Meh.
Profile Image for Lis Carey.
2,213 reviews137 followers
January 12, 2011
It's the 23rd century, and the world is a wasteland caused by pollution and global warming. Exposure to the unfiltered air or water leads rapidly to cancer or other nasty conditions. Giant corporations, now known as Coms, dominate the world, and their privileged executive class as well as many of their protected employees, or "protes", live in domed cities. The Coms are in a more or less constant struggle with the Orgs, especially the biggest, baddest Org of them all, the WTO. (It's worth mentioning that a significant, and possibly dominant, part of the WTO are its AIs.) The Coms are not the good guys.

This doesn't seem like a promising set-up, and I have many complaints about the details. Despite that, I found myself enjoyng the book.

Dominic Jedes has wealth and position beyond the dreams of avarice. He's the (cloned) son of the president of ZahlenBank, one of the most powerful of the Coms. If he's lately been having some disagreements with his father, finding some of his decisions affecting protes to be a little too ruthlessly pragmatic, he nevertheless believes in the system and loves his father. His father's approaching death is an added source of tension between them, as the elder Jedes has chosen to forego what aggressive medical care could do for him, in favor of creating a neural profile that will live on in the computer network after his physical death.

On what proves to be the last day of his father's physical life, Dominic unwisely makes a joke in a board meeting about dealing with the problem of an unprofitable mining sub that ZahlenBank got in a foreclosure by freeing the protes and giving them the sub. This unfortunately strikes his father and the board as a wonderfully clever idea--no costs for continuing to support these now-useless workers! Then Dear Old Dad promptly dies, the freed protes start broadcasting to the world for more discontented protes to join them, and ZahlenBank is suddenly in deep, deep trouble. The WTO steps in with an offer to arrange negotiations, if Dominic will meet with the protes alone, accompanied only by a WTO agent. He reluctantly agrees, and unhappily finds that he is accompanied also by the hated neural profile of his dead father. (The NP insists it's the real thing; Dominic does not agree. Dominic also believes it lacks the humanity and honor his father had; I think the evidence is that he had an overly-rosy view of his father.) In short order, Dominic is getting a very exciting look at how the other 90% lives.

As I said, I have a lot of specific complaints. The background feels as if it was insufficiently thought out. Europe seems to be about all that sort of survived the collapse. If the ice caps completely melted, why didn't all that cold, fresh water running into the Atlantic do bad things to the Gulf Stream and the North Atlantic Drift? If Europe is the last economy standing, why is the basic currency the deutchdollar rather than the euro? And if giant multinational corporations are the bad guys, how can the WTO be the good guys? And Dominic seems quite improbaby naïve. What Dominic isn't, though, is either stupid, or improbably virtuous. He's a basically likable guy who's a product of his society and upbringing. He has believably human and reactions to the individuals he meets, for both good and ill, and alters his assumptions about how the world really works only with a plausible amount of resistance and mental pain. All in all, this is an enjoyable light read.
1,472 reviews20 followers
March 5, 2009
Two hundred years from now, Earth has become a toxic wasteland. Everyone lives in domes. Global warming has pushed the temperate climates farther north, rendering the area around the equator uninhabitable. Corporations called coms have takien over, ruling billions of protes, or "protected persons" (actually, little better than slaves).

Dominic Jedes is about to become president of ZahlenBank, the only institution more powerful than the coms. He isn't just the son of Richter Jedes, the bank's founder, he is an exact genetic copy of his father. He directs the bank to give two thousand protes their freedom, trapping them in a rusting, malfunctioning submarine at the bottom of the ocean. They are supposed to die, but they don't. They broadcast an untraceable and continuous message over the Net, encouraging others to join them. The free protes get thousands of takers.

Every minute that the message is broadcast, ZahlenBank's financial condition is damaged. Dominic is forced to go to the sub, and somehow shut off that message. For someone who has spent his life in filtered air, and with the finest in designer medicines in his bloodstream, when Dominic enters the sub, he feels like he has descended into hell. It's hot, stinking, packed with people, and the oxygen-generating system is on the verge of collapse. People are constantly putting up walls everywhere, so any attempt to reach the bridge quickly becomes impossible. Within minutes, Dominic feels like he has contracted some major disease. When he first reaches the sub, Dominic wants to reach the bridge, expose the sub's location, have everyone arrested, and get back to cleanliness as soon as possible. The longer he remains on the sub, the more sympathy he has for these people, and the more he wants to help them, instead of turning them in.

This is a strong, well done piece of writing. It has good characters, good society building, and an interesting story. The reader will not go wrong with this novel.

Profile Image for arjuna.
485 reviews8 followers
March 26, 2013
A nice jaunty little read; overall trajectory is fairly clear from the beginning, and the workers vs exploitative upper class thing isn't new, but it's fresh enough to be fun, and Buckner keeps her hero and his immediate surrounds interesting - particularly when the action is confined to the isolated underwater world of the rebels. Fewer marks for the secondary characters and villain who seem rather thin. Nevertheless: enjoyable, vivid, marks the author as one to watch.
3 reviews
April 27, 2009
This was decent. Another sci-fi about the privileged few looking down upon and abusing the masses. It covers a lot about the combining of man and machine, and how a computer chip implant can completely take over the human mind.
14 reviews
November 8, 2014
I thoroughly enjoy the dystopian future this author paints. The fate of these characters is not all that unbelievable and the story holds together pretty well throughout.
Profile Image for Marcus Johnston.
Author 16 books38 followers
December 25, 2016
Good, not great cyberpunk. It started out well, and ended well, but the middle was "Look how cool my universe is," a la Mission to Gravity. It was predictable, but enjoyable.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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