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320 pages, Hardcover
First published May 8, 2018
“The machines of the mind are more difficult to recognize than machines of iron and steam.”
"But think about this, maybe even though there are infinite versions of you, maybe every single one of them is an asshole."
"But think about this, maybe even though there are infinite versions of you, maybe every single one of them is an asshole."Steve Toutonghi's sophomore novel Side Life begins with Vin Walsh (who is—no spoiler here—the asshole in the quote above). As the book begins, Vin has just experienced an unusual career change: from the CEO of Sigmoto, the tech company he founded, to an otherwise unemployed house-sitter.
—p.226
"Why create a machine to render a virtual reality when each of us has one already?"I have wondered this myself—our minds are very good at coming up with complex imagery given very little input, after all. I called my version "inferential graphics," in "chapter 1 of an unwritten sf novel"—but the technology Vin finds in what Side Life's dust jacket copy calls Nerdean's "secret basement lab" turns out to be something else, not really VR at all. The way Vin journeys without moving is more of a mechanism for exploring the contingent nature of our experience of reality... and if that seems a bit nebulous, well, things aren't much clearer for Vin...
—handwritten note, p.59