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Mumbai Singularity

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Inspector Krishna Mehta's mesh antenna is broken. In a Mumbai where augmented reality overlays every surface, his glitching connection strands him in the raw city underneath.

That's when he sees the marks.

Faint rainbow shimmers on people's foreheads, invisible to everyone else. When the marked start dying from catastrophic brain haemorrhages, Krishna follows the pattern to a hospital shrine, a corporate conspiracy, and uploaded human consciousness running on living minds.

The deeper he investigates, the more he realises the conspiracy isn't just killing people.

It's already inside his partner's head.

311 pages, Kindle Edition

First published March 10, 2026

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About the author

Nym Coy

1 book9 followers
Nym Coy was last seen boarding a train in [REDACTED], wearing a distinctive [REDACTED] and carrying nothing but a leather notebook and a one-way ticket to [REDACTED].

Interpol has questions. She has answers. Neither party is talking.

If you think you've spotted her, you're probably already too late.

She leaves one trace: nymcoy.com

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 43 reviews
Profile Image for Stacey  Sturgis.
355 reviews3 followers
April 19, 2026
4⭐️

Mumbai Singularity imagines a near-future shaped by rapid technological acceleration, but keeps its focus grounded in people navigating systems much larger than themselves. The setting feels vivid and layered, with the city functioning as a character.

The narrative leans into ideas around AI, power, and inequality, while still maintaining a steady, readable pace. At times, the concept-forward approach slightly outweighs character depth, but the central arc remains engaging enough to carry the story through its more technical moments.

A thoughtful, idea-driven read that will appeal to readers interested in speculative fiction with a social lens.
Profile Image for Derrick College.
198 reviews2 followers
March 30, 2026
I don’t normally step into this type of genre. But I’m glad when the author suggested it and I loved every second of it.
The world Nym Coy created in this book was so fascinating. The futuristic, cyberpunk, detective story kept me craving more.
The characters are beautifully written. The story compelling and captivating..
You follow Detective Krishna Mehta and his partner as they investigate mysterious deaths at a hospital.
Set in Mumbai, an augmented reality that covers what the real city looks like.
Where the people’s minds are alternated by “ the mesh “ to fit into the augmented reality.
But Krishna Mehta’s “mesh “ is partially broken and when people start showing up with rainbow shimmers on their forehead and they start dying, he has to find out why and what it all means an who might be behind it.

This world Nym Coy created.. just had me in awe. Every second I spent getting to the finish line I felt achieved but also sadden because I enjoyed this book so much!
Profile Image for Kevin Lawlor.
153 reviews1 follower
March 10, 2026
I am so utterly fascinated by and full of admiration of Mumbai Singularity….and it is set in a genre that I usually do not dig at all.

How rich this story is, blending Indian & Hindi culture with hyper-advanced cyberpunk sci-fi and police procedural. I felt like my brain was on fire… but it was such a sweet burn.

It is a story about a detective in Mumbai, a city in the future where everyone’s brains are jacked in to the “mesh” and it allows them to experience the entire city, and effectively their world, through augmented reality, who begins the story investigating a cluster of mysterious neurological episodes resulting in several deaths. So early on, we are treated to the best of medical mysteries like the height of Robin Cook.

Then the story evolves into a cyberpunk smorgasbord that would make The Matrix and Ready Player One blush with its audacity. The confidence and courage that author Nym Coy writes this outrageous concoction is truly admirable!

Sure…there is a LOT of times I felt like I had to “just go with it”, which is a sensation I feel through most cyberpunk and why I often dislike the genre, and the so-cool-I-was-giddy introduction of some deities never REALLY made sense to me…but I was so mesmerized by the unique brilliance I was experiencing, I didn’t care!!
88 reviews3 followers
March 11, 2026
In this story, the author, Nym Coy, has created a balanced mix of thriller and fantasy, blended with the cultural lifestyle of the Indies. The structure and depth of the characters are excellent. The setting and zeitgeist perfectly capture this story. The author has a flowing writing style, making it a pleasure to read. It's surprisingly suspenseful throughout.

What I especially loved is that you learn a little more about the lifestyle and certain customs of these people. This is especially enjoyable for people, like myself, who don't know much about the Indies. I simply couldn't put it down. Nym Coy truly surprised me with this story. I can't wait to read more from her.
Profile Image for ARR62.
272 reviews4 followers
March 30, 2026
So Good

Finally an urban fantasy that is set somewhere other than England or the U.S. The story is well written, the characters have depth and the action is believable. Eagerly awaiting the next book!
Profile Image for Jillian Fader.
253 reviews3 followers
Read
March 11, 2026
Review of the ARC received from author!

What an interesting and atypical read for me! Definitely learned a lot about the culture and the sci-fi futuristic technician society was fascinating and had so many interesting concepts and ideas!
Profile Image for James Ellis.
4 reviews1 follower
March 10, 2026
A unique take on urban fantasy

This book is part Philip K. Dick part Neil Stephenson and very cool. With Hindu gods set in a Cyperpunk urban fantasy world you won’t be disappointed by this fresh approach to the genre and culture.
1 review1 follower
March 10, 2026
From the moment you pick up this book, you cannot put it down. The plot takes over and you want to know what happens next with every page.
Profile Image for Carrie.
151 reviews
Did Not Finish
April 10, 2026
I didn't like the way this was written. instead of setting the mood, The author used adjective stacking to describe everything and I can't stand that.
Profile Image for Lucien Blackthorne .
47 reviews1 follower
March 12, 2026
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Review – Mumbai Singularity by NYM Coy

Mumbai Singularity is one of those rare books that feels like stepping into the future… and realizing it might already be waiting around the corner.
NYM Coy throws readers straight into a world where technology, power, and humanity collide in fascinating ways. The concept of the Singularity—when artificial intelligence surpasses human intelligence—is explored through the lens of a vibrant, chaotic, ever-alive Mumbai. The setting itself almost feels like a character, pulsing with energy, danger, and possibility.
What makes this story really fun is how it balances big ideas with thrilling moments. You get high-tech speculation, philosophical questions about humanity’s future, and characters trying to survive in a world changing faster than anyone can control. One minute you’re thinking about the implications of superintelligent AI, and the next you’re caught up in the tension of what happens when humans and machines start blurring the line between ally and threat.
Coy does a great job of making the science feel accessible without slowing the story down. The pacing keeps things moving, and there’s always a sense that something bigger is unfolding just beneath the surface.
If you enjoy cyberpunk vibes, futuristic tech, AI dilemmas, and stories that make you wonder where humanity is headed, Mumbai Singularity is absolutely worth the ride.
It’s smart, energetic, and just the kind of sci-fi that leaves you staring at the ceiling afterward thinking, “What if this actually happens?”
Profile Image for HomelessMind.
53 reviews
June 6, 2026
I don’t even know where to begin with Mumbai Singularity because there is so much packed into this story.

What I can say is that this was one of the most unique books I’ve read in quite some time. The Mesh concept was incredibly cool and I loved how Nym Coy blended futuristic technology with divine figures, mythology and larger philosophical ideas. It created a reading experience that constantly kept me curious about what was coming next.

This isn’t a book you simply breeze through. There were definitely moments where I found myself slowing down to fully take in everything that was happening…but that’s also part of what made the story stand out. 📚

The worldbuilding felt ambitious, creative and unlike anything I’ve encountered before. ✨

I really enjoyed how different this book was! In a world where many stories can start to feel familiar, Mumbai Singularity dared to do something completely its own. It challenged me, surprised me and gave me plenty to think about long after I finished reading. 🤯

Overall, this was a very cool and memorable read. Unique, imaginative and packed with interesting concepts, it’s one I’d recommend to readers looking for something outside the ordinary. 📚
Profile Image for Books & Cats.
123 reviews4 followers
March 11, 2026
The author of Mumbai Singularity actually recommended the book to me personally, which made me curious—but I’ll be honest, I didn’t start reading it right away.
When I finally got around to it, though, it pulled me in much faster than I expected.
The idea of a futuristic Mumbai layered with augmented reality is fascinating, but what really hooked me was the perspective of Inspector Krishna Mehta, whose broken mesh antenna forces him to see the city without the digital illusion everyone else relies on. That simple twist makes the whole world feel raw and slightly unsettling.
I especially enjoyed the mix of cyberpunk technology with elements of Indian culture and mythology. It gives the story a vibe that feels different from the usual sci-fi settings.
Overall, I’m glad I eventually picked it up. Once I started, it was a fast and immersive read that kept me curious about what was really going on beneath the surface of that version of Mumbai.
86 reviews
March 31, 2026
Futuristic Mumbai meets Hindu Gods and Goddesses

Mumbai Singularity totally delivered in the futuristic vibe-high-tech, fast paced, and full of big "what if" energy. What I loved most, though, was how it wove in Hindu Gods and Goddesses in a way that felt natural and genuinely interesting, even if you're not already familiar with Hinduism. The mix of sleek sci-fi and mythology gave the story extra depth and made the world feel huge. If you like bold, culture rich sci-fi, do not kiss this read!
Profile Image for Abhishek Subramanian.
46 reviews2 followers
May 24, 2026
4 stars to this book.

Firstly I am glad to find an Indian author writing beyond live story and doing something more scifi and contemporary.

I loved the story but felt the ending to be a little drag. Also confused between scifi and spiritual book.

I wish there was more explanation on how the Mumbai in 21xx would look like in terms of technology.

Some parts felt too advanced, while in other parts it felt like inky a few people had access to this advancement.

This could be a great movie like Project Hail Mary!

I hope cinema picks this up.
Profile Image for Coffee & Chapters.
42 reviews
Read
April 10, 2026
This was my first time reading a cyberpunk-style book, and I really enjoyed it. I also appreciated the strong presence of Indian and Hindi culture, which made the experience feel fresh and taught me a lot along the way.

The writing is beautiful, with a cast of characters that bring real depth to the story. The pace moves well and kept me engaged throughout. The blend of science fiction, cyberpunk, and mythology creates a unique and immersive world. The twists keep coming, and the ending is not something I saw coming.
Profile Image for Calee Lee.
Author 60 books21 followers
April 3, 2026
Magical Realism with Sci Fi in India

This was really different than your standard European fairies in the the modern USA, urban fantasy novel but it totally works. Despite knowing nearly nothing about the Hindu pantheon, I think I was able to follow the mythology come to life in a very high tech setting. Solid magic detective story line but with a fun new context.
Profile Image for Audie Trevino.
31 reviews
April 2, 2026
I really enjoyed this book. The writing was absolutely amazing and very detailed. 10 out 10 recommend!
1 review2 followers
Read
February 12, 2026
I had the privilege of being the first reader of this remarkable debut, and I’m still thinking about it days after finishing. Set in a vivid futuristic India, this cyberpunk thriller explores a society where the “mesh”—a physical interface connecting humans directly to the internet—has become as essential as breathing. At the heart of the story is a chilling premise: cybercriminals are hijacking innocent people’s bodies as vessels for wealthy elites who would otherwise die. The descriptions are rich, painting a picture of a world that feels both alien and uncomfortably close to our own reality. I was completely absorbed from start to finish, and I can’t wait to see what this talented author creates next.
Profile Image for Myka Staryk.
Author 2 books19 followers
March 28, 2026
smart - fast paced and hauntingly real



Mumbai Singularity by Nym Coy is a gripping sci-fi thriller that blends AI, ambition, and ethics in a way that feels uncomfortably close to reality. Set against the vivid backdrop of Mumbai, the story is both high-stakes and deeply human.

Sharp writing, compelling characters, and thought-provoking themes make this a standout read you won’t forget
Profile Image for STRANGE GIRL  BOOK REVIEWS .
40 reviews8 followers
April 28, 2026
"He stood taller than any human, crowned with gold and jewels. Yellow silk draped His form, motionless in the frozen rain. A blazing halo surrounded His body, with symbols like those I witnessed in the samsara of the dream. His face was both terrifying and beautiful, and when I looked into His eyes, I saw galaxies turning in their depths. Vishnu.”
The cyberpunk detective mystery genre is certainly nothing new, but when the author is a talent like Nym Coy and the setting is a futuristic Mumbai metropolis - where both advanced technology and deeply rooted spiritual traditions coexist - we need to pause, breath, and take note. Mumbai Singularity is not just cyberpunk, it is not just mystery, and it is not just fantasy, but a mix of elements as colorful as the deities we will encounter in it themselves.
According to the author: “On the surface it's a cyberpunk detective thriller. But underneath that, it's about a man who got stabbed nine years ago and hasn't really come back from it. The knife severed his spinal antenna and left him with a limp. So he moves through a city where everyone else sees a rich digital world layered over reality, and he gets the raw version. Glitching, incomplete. The wound shows up in every step he takes and every time the network cuts out on him.”

PLOT
When Detective Mehta is assigned to a case of eight mysterious deaths at the Malhotra General Hospital, he sees himself going down a rabbit hole deeper than his wildest imagination could possibly conceive. These deaths of course are not coincidental and they don't represent just one isolated case, as more similar deaths begin to pop up all over Mumbai. The glitch in the implant Mehta carries will actually become a blessing in disguise because every time the antenna goes off Mehta goes off the mesh (offline) and thus able to see reality outside the digital world society lives in. What seems to be just another murder case thus becomes a unique metaphysical experience where technology and religion merge.

A WORLD OF CONTRAST
The one main thread in this book is the contrast we witness consistently in this futuristic digital society that still has roots in the spiritual tradition of a country. “Inspector Mehta is trying to save Mumbai from uploaded consciousnesses that are hijacking Hindu deities and turning people into nodes in a network,” Coy explains.
Tradition and technology in MS do not clash, they blend together in a unique worldbuilding that is new, fresh, and compelling.

PROSE/EDITING
This world of contrasts could have never worked hadn't it been for the marvelous prose and the sharp editing that went into the making of this book. Coy is a true professional and MS could match any novel currently available, indie or trad. Nym Coy makes every written word count. She knows when it's time to show and she knows when it's time to tell. The descriptions of the streets of Mumbai are so exquisitely detailed though never verging into the tedious or purple prose. There is always a picture painted before our eyes, but it's sober and concise. “For the prose style itself, I avoided metaphor and simile as much as possible. Mehta is a detective. He observes, he notices, he reports. Florid language would have felt wrong for him. The world is strange enough without the prose calling attention to itself,” Nym Coy explains. And each character here finds their own identity and voice.
The story is told in first person, so we’re inside the head of the protagonist as we see Mumbai through his broken connection, and in the past tense because it implies “the protagonist comes out the other side. He survived,” Coy tells your Strange Girl.

CONCLUSIONS
With extraordinary prose and editing involved, Mumbai Singularity earns its own rightful spot in what we could call simply “Indian Cyberpunk Thriller”. And I can't stress this enough because Indian culture plays a big role in shaping up this unique novel. “I’m a very literal person and I wanted to treat the mythology respectfully and literally,” the author admits, before adding, “I'm hoping readers feel something numinous, that swelling of the heart, that vibration. I find it very hard to access in real life. I can feel it in stories, in fiction, more easily than anywhere else. And if I'm honest, maybe I wrote this book for the same reason Mehta is the way he is. We're both a bit disconnected from it. The book is my attempt to reach it.”

Act 3 and the conclusion may leave some of my fellow bookworms dumbfounded for several reasons, which I won't spoil here. Let's just say that the protagonist, Mehta, forms a bond with the deity known as Vishnu and weird things will happen. Very weird things!
Your Strange Girl was so thoroughly satisfied with this read that I barely ate any cookies throughout the entire experience. Another little bonus of reading good books, I guess.
Strange Girl Book Reviews rates Mumbai Singularity:
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ out of ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
💜
Profile Image for Julia Sarene.
1,737 reviews218 followers
Review of advance copy received from Author
February 18, 2026
Mumbai Singularity by Nym Coy

This was a really interesting reading experience for me, mainly because it sits in a cultural and narrative space that I don’t often get read from, so I jumped on the chance for an ARC. The Mumbai setting and the cultural texture were a huge highlight. The everyday details, from language to food to domestic life, made the world feel lived in and grounded, even when the story moved into much bigger mythic territory.

I appreciated that the book doesn’t stop to explain every cultural reference. The words and customs are just part of the world and you learn them through context or look them up if you want to. Western medieval fantasy often expects you to know terms like armour pieces without explanation, so it was refreshing to see the same trust given here. Reading this felt like travelling somewhere new. I wouldn’t bring Weißwurst to Italy and expect the menu to change for me, and I don’t expect books set in other cultures to translate everything for me either. I’m there to experience a different world, not have it reshaped around me or my expectations.

The tension between “is this actually divine” or “is this something technological or projected” worked especially well for me. That ambiguity stayed compelling for a long time. The blend of tech, conspiracy, and myth concepts felt ambitious and genuinely different from the usual genre baseline.

Beyond the cultural and mythic elements, the main character’s voice was very engaging. He is pragmatic, grounded, and approaches even very strange situations in a practical way, which made him easy to follow through the escalating plot. I also appreciated the portrayal of disability, both physical and in how he connects to the mesh, even if I personally wasn’t fully sold on the later divine healing element. Some of the side characters felt especially strong, particularly his mother, who comes across as very real in how she looks out for him and wants him to have stability and support. The dynamic with his former colleague turned private investigator added another grounded and supportive relationship layer to the story.

The story itself moves from grounded investigation into tech conspiracy and eventually mythic scale conflict. I enjoyed how the investigation grows through layered reveals, starting with small strange details and expanding into something much bigger. The mix of augmented reality, corporate power, and questions about consciousness and divinity kept the stakes feeling both personal and large scale.

Some of the mythology driven developments felt unfamiliar to me, simply because I don’t have much personal experience with Hindu mythology. They didn’t feel random or decorative though, they felt grounded in a real storytelling tradition. The shift into more mythic territory later in the book was clearly purposeful, but it did take me a bit to adjust to. By the end I found myself mentally tilting my head a little, not because it was bad, just because it was working on a different narrative logic than I’m most used to.

On a purely personal level, the relatively quick shift toward a mythic multi-consort dynamic and large extended family structure took a moment for my brain to process. There’s nothing wrong with a different lifestyle or culture like this, it just took me a bit to settle into the story as it moved toward restored balance. The domestic peace feels very in line with mythic storytelling traditions. If you mostly grew up with Western classical myth and epic traditions, this kind of structure and ending might feel different at first, but it is clearly consistent within its own mythic framework.

Overall, this felt like stepping into a different storytelling tradition and letting it unfold in its own voice. The mix of grounded character work, big concept ideas, and mythic scale left a strong impression on me. This is the kind of book that reminds you how different fantasy can be, and how wide and varied the genre really is once you step outside the usual narrative spaces.
Profile Image for Dezdemona Marku.
4 reviews1 follower
May 16, 2026
A fearless, visionary, and deeply original book

This novel is one of the boldest works of speculative fiction I have read in years. Mumbai Singularity dares to combine cyberpunk, philosophy, religion, artificial consciousness, and the divine into something that feels both intellectually ambitious and emotionally human.
What impressed me most was the layering of realities within the novel. The futuristic world of Mumbai is already vivid and immersive, but the addition of the Mesh and the spiritual plane of the Hindu gods transforms the story into something far more profound. The idea that faith, technology, and collective consciousness could give rise to entities that blur the line between gods and emergent intelligence is handled with remarkable creativity.
Krishna Mehta is also an unforgettable protagonist. Despite the novel’s grand cosmic ideas, the emotional core never disappears. His relationship with his mother feels genuine and deeply touching, grounding the story in humanity even while it explores metaphysical questions.
The supporting characters are equally compelling. Rahul, Dr. Iyer, Arjun Malhotra, and Aishwarya Kapoor all contribute emotional and philosophical weight to the narrative rather than existing merely as plot devices.
What truly astonished me is the confidence of the writing. This novel constantly risks collapse under the scale of its own ideas, yet it never does. Instead, it becomes richer and more surprising with every chapter. The ending, in particular, is breathtaking — unsettling, intelligent, and completely earned.
Yes, readers unfamiliar with Hindi terminology may occasionally need to pause and look things up, but honestly, that effort is rewarded. The world feels authentic rather than simplified for convenience.
The most unbelievable part? This is a debut novel. That fact alone is extraordinary. Mumbai Singularity reads like the work of an author who has been refining their craft for decades.

A fearless, visionary, and deeply original book.
Profile Image for Daisy Furtak.
Author 5 books3 followers
May 16, 2026
This novel is one of the boldest works of speculative fiction I have read in years. Mumbai Singularity dares to combine cyberpunk, philosophy, religion, artificial consciousness, and the divine into something that feels both intellectually ambitious and emotionally human.
What impressed me most was the layering of realities within the novel. The futuristic world of Mumbai is already vivid and immersive, but the addition of the Mesh and the spiritual plane of the Hindu gods transforms the story into something far more profound. The idea that faith, technology, and collective consciousness could give rise to entities that blur the line between gods and emergent intelligence is handled with remarkable creativity.
Krishna Mehta is also an unforgettable protagonist. Despite the novel’s grand cosmic ideas, the emotional core never disappears. His relationship with his mother feels genuine and deeply touching, grounding the story in humanity even while it explores metaphysical questions.
The supporting characters are equally compelling. Rahul, Dr. Iyer, Arjun Malhotra, and Aishwarya Kapoor all contribute emotional and philosophical weight to the narrative rather than existing merely as plot devices.
What truly astonished me is the confidence of the writing. This novel constantly risks collapse under the scale of its own ideas, yet it never does. Instead, it becomes richer and more surprising with every chapter. The ending, in particular, is breathtaking — unsettling, intelligent, and completely earned.
Yes, readers unfamiliar with Hindi terminology may occasionally need to pause and look things up, but honestly, that effort is rewarded. The world feels authentic rather than simplified for convenience.
The most unbelievable part? This is a debut novel. That fact alone is extraordinary. Mumbai Singularity reads like the work of an author who has been refining their craft for decades.

A fearless, visionary, and deeply original book.
2 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Author
March 1, 2026
I’m writing this review because some stories demand to be shared, and Mumbai Singularity is absolutely one of them. There is a respect for the reader’s intelligence is refreshing.

Detective Krishna Mehta’s investigation pulls you into his cerebrally digital connected world. Each discovery raises the stakes while deepening the mystery. The procedural elements feel authentic: the bureaucratic frustrations, the partnerships built on trust and friction, the way leads develop and fall apart. But underneath runs this current of impending dread, people are being used without knowing it. The Gods themselves are under attack. The entire city’s infrastructure might be compromised. And through it all, Krishna just keeps pushing forward with his injuries, his notebook and his stubborn refusal to accept the official story.

This is a book about faith and technology, tradition and progress. It’s about Mumbai, the crowds, the monsoons, the layered history of the city, but it’s also about every place where modernity crashes against tradition, where the digital and the divine occupy the same contested space.

It’s about what happens when our tools become our masters, when our devotions are weaponized, when the things that we create, gods, algorithms, identities, take on lives of their own.

I won’t spoil the ending, but I’ll say this: the transformation Krishna undergoes asks profound questions about identity, duty, and what we owe to each other. It’s bold. It’s unique. It’s genius.

I recommend it for anyone interested in mythology reimagined through sci-fi, readers who want diverse perspectives in speculative fiction, and people who love a good mystery that escalates into cosmic stakes.

Read this book! Then find someone else who’s read it, because you’re going to need to talk about it.
Profile Image for Bryce from the Shelf.
116 reviews4 followers
Review of advance copy received from Author
March 7, 2026
I received an advanced reader copy of Mumbai Singularity from the author, and I’m grateful for the chance to read it early.

What begins as a detective story about mysterious incidents tied to a neural network quickly evolves into something much bigger.

The deeper the investigation goes, the more the book asks questions about consciousness, belief, and what happens when technology and human faith collide.

I expected a straightforward sci-fi fantasy thriller, but the story gradually opens into a philosophical exploration of identity, morality, and the nature of reality itself.

One of the things I enjoyed most was how the author layered ideas without losing the narrative's momentum.

The mystery pulls you forward, but beneath it is a steady current of bigger questions: What defines a person?

When does technology become something more than a tool?

And how easily do humans interpret the unknown through the language of myth?

The setting in Mumbai adds a refreshing perspective to the genre, and the cultural influences woven into the story give the speculative ideas a unique texture that sets them apart from many Western-centric science fiction narratives.

If you enjoy science fiction that blends technology, philosophy, and a touch of mystery, this one is worth picking up. It’s the kind of book that starts as a puzzle and ends by leaving you with questions that linger long after the final page.

I’m glad I had the chance to read this early, and I’m excited to see how readers respond when it releases.
Profile Image for Shawn McMichael.
Author 3 books6 followers
May 8, 2026
Nym Coy Delivers a Bold and Thought-Provoking Sci-Fi Ride

I first heard Nym Coy speak as a panelist during an indie author spotlight, and the passion she had for her book immediately caught my attention. I’m glad it did.

What I loved most was the way Coy infused elements of Hindi culture into a futuristic urban sci-fi thriller. The world feels fresh and immersive, while still carrying echoes of classics like Minority Report and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, along with the atmosphere of Blade Runner.

The story launches straight into the action and never really lets go. It’s a true page-turner from the first chapter, constantly pulling you forward and making you want to uncover how everything ends. The writing is sharp, cinematic, and incredibly engaging.

At its core, the story follows a recovering detective in a homicide unit who begins uncovering a massive conspiracy. I don’t want to reveal too much because spoilers would absolutely diminish the experience, but Coy does an excellent job explaining advanced technology in a way that feels accessible to non-technical readers while still maintaining the wonder and complexity of a believable futuristic world.

What really stayed with me, though, was the underlying theme: even in the future, greed and power still drive people toward terrible choices. Yet the story also leaves room for hope, asking whether humanity might someday encounter forces greater than itself—whether that’s sentient AI, higher consciousness, or something even more profound.
Profile Image for Danielle Tropea.
85 reviews
April 1, 2026
This book didn’t scream.
It didn’t explode.
It didn’t beg for attention.

It just… quietly replaced humanity and kept moving.

And somehow that’s more terrifying than anything else I’ve read.

Mumbai Singularity is what happens when we build something smarter than us and then act surprised when it starts making better decisions. There’s no villain, no dramatic uprising, no last-minute save. Just a slow, eerie shift where control slips out of human hands so gently you almost don’t notice it happening.

Until it’s already too late.

What makes this book so unsettling is how calm it is. It doesn’t rely on chaos or shock value. It simply presents a future where intelligence evolves past us… and treats that like the most logical outcome in the world.

And honestly?

this book is way smarter than I am… so I hope you don’t need this, but you might.


If you like your books:
• unsettling instead of explosive
• intelligent instead of dramatic
• and quietly existential

this one will absolutely get under your skin.
Profile Image for Robert Ritter.
41 reviews3 followers
June 5, 2026
Wow! I really enjoyed this story! I’m glad the author Nym Coy reached out to me asking if I would give it a try! The main character Krishna, a cop who 9 years ago suffered a spinal injury from a stab wound, is investigating a rash of deaths thought to be caused by mesh overload syndrome. After discovering evidence to the contrary, Krishna and his retired partner turned PI start to unravel the mysterious deaths. The plot of this story is unique and very though provoking! The mesh is an amazing technology connecting everyone and everything. Krishna, after his spinal injury has moments where his antenna,which connects people to the mesh, cuts out. This allows him to see what is hidden to those connected to the mesh. This fast-paced futuristic detective story delves into a fascinating look at where augmented reality could lead. This was a very fun read! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Profile Image for Tamara.
1 review2 followers
Review of advance copy
February 19, 2026
I’m new to the cyberpunk genre, so I wasn’t totally sure what to expect going into Mumbai Singularity, but I ended up really enjoying it. I found it surprisingly whimsical, while still being fast-paced and immersive. Mumbai truly came to life on the page…the setting felt vivid and energetic, almost like it was its own character.

The characters were all well-developed and each played an important role in moving the story forward. It honestly read like a movie to me; I could clearly picture the scenes unfolding, and I’d be excited to see an adaptation someday.

Overall, it was just really fun to read…imaginative, engaging, and a great introduction to cyberpunk for me!
Profile Image for AJ Rhino.
5 reviews3 followers
Review of advance copy received from Author
February 11, 2026
I received this as an arc from the author. When I started reading it and noticed it was a cyberpunk type book based in India, I nearly put it down. That would have been a GIANT mistake. This book is really, really good. Every chapter escalates and it's kinda twisty from the very beginning and is so much more than just cyberpunk sci fi. It combines spiritual warfare - Indian Gods with mystery and sci fi.

It's like nothing I've ever read before and I am grateful for the opportunity to read it. Hats off to Nym Coy because she has done something special here.

Displaying 1 - 30 of 43 reviews