(((Spoiler Alert))) I listened to this on Audio and was more than just disappointed.
This is one of those times when a pretty good premise goes bad. We're in the near future (2020), on a floating island hiding a secret. What is that secret? Its an ominipresent entity that gains conciseness from the internet... (OK... a little cliche... but...) So our heroin visits our idealic island as part of a trip planned to recruit the best and the brightest recent graduates from America's top universities. We're getting the story from her point of view (at least for a while).
She meets a big muckity muck from the island's elite class, finds out he's been watching her for a decade or so (and paying for her education), falls in love with him, sleeps with him, and then finds a desperate plot to kill off the poor of the planet to keep them from taking control of Earth's future. (Somewhere during this period, we learn our muckity muck is really more than 70 years old, a cyborg, and has had a fling with the island's security chief).
After all of that enter Saturn. Saturn is really behind the plot, and now races to kill our heroin. As she is taking a nap in a little futuristic cubicle at an airport (because, of course, she leaves the island right away to tell everybody of the deadly plot she pieced together from an overheard conversation and a few news articles)Saturn hires somebody to kill her by overdosing her on sleep....
But wait, our lover boy from the island steps in to save her, by intentionally deleting the part of her memory related to the islands little secret (and all knowledge of her love for him)...without being fully aware of the secret himself.
By this time I hated the book. POV shifts in the middle of scenes, totally useless postulations on the future of cybernetic connections to the internet, below average dialoge, and absolutely no mystery with a life span of more than 5 pages, killed this for me.
Normally I can slog through crap if I'm listening to it on audio. I couldn't make myself do it, I just couldn't, so I gave it back to the library unfinished.
If you're into passive narrative, poor plot development, useless information, and total lack of originality, well then this is your book.
With all of that said, if this book had opened with our heroin waking up in the airport with no memories of what had happened over the past two days and followed her on a desperate adventure to recover her memory while her mind slowly fractured into complete disassociation; I would have liked it. The authors could have made this story gripping, no more... compelling. This could have been a masterpiece (no matter what Saturn really turns out to be).
Instead, its a silly piece of garbage not worth your time.
I was kind of holding back... did my point get across? I strongly recommend you avoid this book.