A globe-hopping SF novel chronicles the unforeseen consequences of the creation of a unique artificial intelligence.
Set largely in the present day, the narrative revolves around William Ell, an unassuming mathematics professor who just lost his father in a tragic hit-and-run accident in Hamburg, Germany. Ell, who had never been close to his high-tech entrepreneur father, discovers that he knew very little about the man’s business dealings. Not only did his father oversee a top-secret research facility in Southwest Arizona that housed a supercomputer and controlled a multimillion-dollar satellite system, he also left Ell a “gold pocket watch, a little black book containing some sort of numerical code, and an unbelievably large green diamond” in a safe deposit box in Zurich. When Ell tries to find connections between the massive gem and the supercomputer, he learns that his father was, in fact, murdered and that he has now become a target. The gem, it seems, contains advanced tech that—once fully utilized—could either save the world or destroy it, depending on whose hands it winds up in. With the FBI and an unknown international crime organization after both him and the “big as hell” diamond, Ell sets out to find his father’s killer and uncover the mystery inside the gem. But what he and his misfit crew of colleagues discover shatters the very foundations of reality. In this series opener translated from the German by Oden, Harwin’s insightful exploration of various science-based speculations is an obvious strength. They include quantum-based AI and interfaces between the human brain and the computational core of an AI. But the real power here is in how the pseudonymous author twists together mind-boggling scientific theories with deeply developed and emotionally captivating characters. Ell, senior programmer Trina Shaw, London auction house appraiser Chang Feng Zhao, and FBI agent Gray all have compelling story arcs that make for an undeniably page-turning read.
Razor-sharp writing and mind-blowing scientific conceptualization make this a top-notch, Crichton-esque thriller.