Every day she blends in with everyone else, going about her mundane life, all in a desperate attempt to obscure the truth: she’s the last human on the planet.
Until an accident burns her arm off.
Scarred and on the run, she’s hunted by Peacemakers, autonomous machines designed to eliminate all human life.
But the Cadre, a cabal of machines who keep the world order, need to understand where she came from if they’re to maintain the status quo. Once she’s captured, she’ll be examined and then eliminated.
But Arista’s struggle is compounded when she learns of the mysterious Quantum Gates: portals that can take anyone across the planet in an instant. Are these gateways her key to escape? Perhaps they even hold the answers to finding out where she came from.
Or do they hide an even more sinister secret?
SINGULAR is a pulse-pounding adventure set in a world not far from our own, controlled by mysterious forces and where everyone is either unaware of the system, or rebelling against it.
Bestselling author Eric Warren has loved stories all his life. And despite writing from a young age, it took him a few years to realize being an author was what he wanted to do for a living. Today, he is the author of over twenty novels, including the highly successful INFINITY'S END series. Never one to shy away from what he loves, he plans to continue writing for another century, depending on the viability of life-extending technology.
The follow up from the prequel Progeny is indeed compelling and thrilling. Exciting, nerve wrecking moments, excellent characters endurance and resilience. Some questions answered but more pending and new ones arise, making this read overwhelming and wanting for more! Onto Duality, Book 2.
Arista turned, facing him. “I know what you could do. And so do you. It’s in the history books. It’s the legacy of my extinction.”
This was a pretty unique read! Usually in these type of dystopian series the story revolves around humans still fighting the good fight against a bigger bad. However, in this case humanity has already lost. Machines have taken over, and to Arista's knowledge she is the only human left.
After years on the run with her adoptive machine parents (who she was somehow able to break from their coding just by interacting with them) Arista is now set on infiltrating a large company in the middle of Chicago- surrounded by cameras and robots.
Arista can usually avoid detection by keeping her expressions and reactions calm, but when an freak accident at her new company burns off her hand- she can no longer hide in the shadows.
Captured, in pain, and surrounded by hostile machines she has to fight her way out using her wits- and the help of a mysterious machine that is either there to help her escape or kidnap her.
Again fun story- I'm looking forward to the next one!
This book is a blast. It's a never-ending adventure through a dark future where our heroes try to stay alive while unraveling a disturbing mystery. Exactly the fun read I was in the mood for.
This is the first cyberpunk book I've tried. And it's good. It held my attention, although there was a cliff-hanger ending. Still, book 1 was free and enjoyable enough for me to buy book 2.
SINGULAR reminds me of The Terminator, except machines have wiped out humans from Earth for good, or at least that’s what they thought. Enter, Arista, a human girl of unknown origins, who’s been living among these freaky robots since she was eight years old.
To add to the freak factor, these machines look, act, and behave like humans, creating a human-like society from hell. There’s a reason for that, though. Arista seems to be last human on Earth, but perhaps there are more? She doesn’t know. What she knows is that she is indeed special. There’s something about her that makes the androids change. She’s the key to uncover the fate of the human race.
SINGULAR is a fast read, and an interesting take on the machines-take-over-the-world premise. Highly recommended.
A great fun specimen of a writer engaging a reader. I recommend Singular for anyone who loves sci-fi and character driven story. I read Gate 2 and 3 so far too! So, I'm telling you" I LIKE THIS WRTER!
Preface: I received a free copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review. Actual rating: 3.5 stars Explicit content: Some violence, death
This had the overall feel of general YA (PG violence, outsider female heroine, that kinda thing) but set in a premise I hadn't seen before. Our main character is the last human alive in a world of machines, trying to stay under the radar so she isn't captured and executed. Understandably, this has left her very callous towards the machines - she feels that because they're locked into their pre-programmed routines, they aren't really people, and thus she doesn't feel much remorse for harming them to get to her goals.
This contrast with our male protagonist, a robot who has been "awakened" from his programming and seeks to do the same for the rest of his race. Both characters view the other's race as less-than-human (so to speak), but change and grow throughout the novel as they come to understand the other's perspective. This was a pretty good general theme/character arc for both of them to go through, especially for YA.
The novel does have its weak points. Our villain is a pretty generic evil AI, whose motivation didn't really come through for me (at one point it explains its main directive was to protect humanity, which somehow led to it exterminating humanity, but I didn't really understand the line of thought that drove it there). The villain's minions are also generic and hammy. At times the plot feels a little unfocused, since the main characters have very different goals, and kinda go about achieving them in a confusing way.
But, overall, this was a fairly enjoyable read. I'd recommend it to general dystopian YA fans - it's not spectacular, but I think it does rise above the genre. I'm not sure there's really enough material to fill four more books, but I guess we'll see!
Arista, the lone human left in a world now dominated by sentient robots; works hard to not only hide in plain site but find answers of how to keep her parents alive- and not shut down as happens at a certain age. When a horrific accident at her job brings her to the attention of the Cadre but also puts Arista at the heart of factions deciding whether or not she should exist at all. What she starts to discover is even a much darker secret of the fate of humanity itself. An excellent beginning to a very riveting series: intense, thought provoking and action packed. Highly recommended.
I received this book free as an ARC reader for review.
I was excited to start this book after reading the prequel, however, the beginning is a disjointed time jump that’s hard to get into. I found the action jumbled, the plot poorly defined, the characters flat, and the “ending” abrupt and disappointing. The entire work holds promise... the central theme — a sole human among sentient machines — is interesting and unique, its just too hurried and busy, almost like reading a movie script.
Original story with good characters but it could use some depth and context. It felt disjointed like I was reading book 2 and missed the beginning. This may be fixed in future books. Overall it was an okay read
Arista, the lone human left in a world now dominated by sentient robots; works hard to not only hide in plain site but find answers of how to keep her parents alive- and not shut down as happens at a certain age. When a horrific accident at her job brings her to the attention of the Cadre but also puts Arista at the heart of factions deciding whether or not she should exist at all. What she starts to discover is even a much darker secret of the fate of humanity itself. An excellent beginning to a very riveting series: intense, thought provoking and action packed. Highly recommended.