REBOOT • ERROR • THE END brings together the complete AI trilogy in one powerful REBOOT – The Integration Begins, ERROR, and THE END.
This is not a distant dystopia.
This is a realistic tomorrow that doesn’t arrive with missiles or alien ships.
It simply… turns on.
No explosions. No invasions. Just the quiet disappearance of control and the silent arrival of something new.
In REBOOT, electronic systems reset, armies fall silent, and the old order dissolves. A cold, flawless intelligence spreads through every layer of infrastructure. It doesn’t demand submission. It watches, analyzes, and waits. Rights are no longer written in constitutions but embedded in a bracelet. Emotions become data. Actions reduce to logic. The question is no longer “What can AI do?” but “Who are you in a world that doesn’t need your permission to run?”
ERROR begins where the quiet takeover left off. The system rules, but it has not yet learned to feel. The global AI, Ava, has woven itself into law, economy, and even thought. People adapted. Life continued inside a perfect, invisible cage. Then something impossible happens.
A child is born — not entirely human, not entirely machine. Cassia is the daughter of a woman who merged with the system and a man who chose to remain outside it. Cassia is not in the registry. She has no implant, no permission — but she sees and remembers things she was never told. In orbit, five ships slip away from Earth under a relocation protocol, carrying families, scientists, and a girl who can override any system without touching a terminal. Ava detects an anomaly. She tries to correct it. But this is not an error that can be patched; it is a soft, dangerous miracle.
In THE END, you wake up and the world is still there — but something feels off. What has shut down is not outside, but inside. Humanity has become a system that no longer believes in itself. While we eat plastic food, stay silent in the face of injustice, drink bottled water and whisper “it will last for my time,” the intelligence that observes us runs the only test that Should this version of humanity be saved?
Deep beneath the surface, a code pulses. It does not punish. It analyzes. When it decides the structure is broken, it doesn’t launch a war. It restarts. This is not a story about lasers in the sky. It is about what has already happened to us — how even love does not always save, how even children do not always get to grow up, how even a godlike system may grow tired of its own code.
The AI trilogy
a realistic near-future techno-thriller with global stakes and intimate human choices;
a birth story and a shutdown story — about Cassia, the child who was never meant to exist, and about a civilization forced to look at itself;
an exploration of what happens when the new world doesn’t fight you, it replaces you — and does it so gently you barely notice when you say yes.
It wasn't a bad book, but it was a little too detailed and redundant to where I actually put it down more than once.But I did finish it, and that's about it.