The Gemini Experiment
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- USD 5.99
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- USD 5.99
Descripción editorial
"A dizzying compilation of action scenes and moral quandaries...Pinkerton wields fast pacing and an entertaining, electrifying plot" - Publishers Weekly
In a secret lab, a team of doctors and scientists funded by a mysterious billionaire create the first human replica entirely from technology. The robot is prepared to host the digitized consciousness of Tom Nolan, a family man suffering from a terminal illness. But when Tom’s replica escapes before the transfer can take place, he is faced with the horrors of an alter ego bent on death and destruction. When the experiment draws the attraction of spies, Tom is caught up in an international crisis with a showdown that could change the course of the world.
FLAME TREE PRESS is the new fiction imprint of Flame Tree Publishing. Launched in 2018 the list brings together brilliant new authors and the more established; the award winners, and exciting, original voices.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Pinkerton's unpredictable sci-fi thriller is a dizzying compilation of action scenes and moral quandaries. Chicago lawyer Tom Nolan, who's dying from Lowrey's disease, hears from a neuroscientist friend who proposes an unorthodox cure: having his consciousness digitized and transferred into a robot replica by a privately funded team of scientists. Tom agrees, but before the transfer can be made, the robot escapes. Pinkerton employs many of the expected tropes regarding look-alikes as the robot flees to Florida, and spies intent on stealing the mind transfer technology enter the story. Surprising plot twists, exciting action, and Tom's everyman characterization save this novel from veering into the ridiculous, but Pinkerton's use of Christian beliefs as a framework to raise moral questions feels incomplete. The conclusion is a strange mix of incongruous cruelty to the villains and a tacked-on happy ending for the heroes. Pinkerton (How I Started the Apocalypse) wields fast pacing and an entertaining, electrifying plot to provide ample distraction from this novel's flaws, but readers will eventually see through the sleight of hand.