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339 pages, ebook
Published September 14, 2018
(This review concerns En anledning att finnas, by Alfred Ruth, in case Goodreads does this stupid thing where it collapses multiple entries into some type of anthology edition)
General impressions
Synopsis: A techno-thriller where the protagonist in on the cusp of solving the control problem but gets waylaid by the NSA and SÄPO.
NB: This book is part of a series. I may or may not have focused my efforts in reviewing the last part of the series.
Rating (Intuitive*): 3
Rating (Weighted**): 3.4
RMSE***(Intuitive,Weighted): 0.319
Mean error***(Intuitive,Weighted): -0.04
Format: Paperback
Language: Swedish
Setting and premise
Aesthetic: 4/5 [w:2.5]
Verisimillitude: 5/5 [w:2.5]
Originality: 2/5 [w:1]
The five-minutes-into-the future anti-cyberpunk (cyberpop?) dystopia is well-imagined, and while not being rife with extremely interesting new ideas it's one of the cases of future world-building that seems the most founded in real-life policy proposals. The tech presented are all outgrowths of stuff that's already possible.
Plot
Design: 3/5 [w:2]
Verimillitude: 4/5 [w:2.5]
Originality: 1/5 [w:0.5]
The focus is too little on the control problem and too much on the thriller aspect. It definitely works as a thriller, but when I picked it up, I was expecting more AI shenanigans. I realise that this is the first part of a trilogy, but it feels like we're only going to go FOOM in the last book or so.
Characters
Design: 4/5 [w:1]
Verimillitude: 4/5 [w:2.5]
Development: 3/5 [w:2]
Sympatheticness: 3/5 [w:2]
Presentation
Prose: 4/5 [w:1.5]
Additional modifiers
Page turner factor: 3/5 [w:3.5]
Mind blown factor: 2/5 [w:2.5]
*The rating I felt this deserved before thinking about it too much.
**Weights displayed next to each applicable scoring criterion. (Weights version 3.1)
***Root mean squared error and mean error calculated for all reviews using this format for books read from 2020-07-12 up until this book (3 reviews).