kupcho1
Footballguy
Try The Deus Machine by Pierre Ouellette (1998)Hey guys,
I'm a big fan of Michael Crichton's earlier works. Can someone recommend some authors that are similar to him in style and genre?
The thing I remember most about this book (and I read it shortly after it came out) was the description of a particular recreational drug. Specifically, that the creators of this drug intentionally made it more difficult to use than it needed to be in order to instill a ritualistic aspect to it, which somehow made it more addictive.From Publishers Weekly
In the year 2005, in the midst of an unprecedented economic depression that has ruined the country and brought the government to the edge of collapse, a renegade genius programs a supercomputer with an artificial intelligence (DEUS) that perpetually reinvents itself--and thereby comes "to life." But when crooked government insiders intent on making profits through chemical warfare use DEUS for their research, the machine, attempting suicide, spawns an unbelievably terrifying array of mutant life forms that begin to run wild over the earth. It's then up to an unlikely threesome--computer programmer Michael Riley, his lover, biomedical engineer Jessica and their young friend Jimi--to save DEUS (and the world) from the bloodthirsty and perpetually mutating horde. This first novel by an advertising executive reads like a glossy repackaging of contemporary action-adventure movies ( Terminator ) with video games ( Space Invaders ) and '50s sci-fi ( Them! ). There's no mistaking the good guys (man, woman and child) from the bad (homicidal pederast who makes his money in germ warfare). Still, the somber, apocalyptic atmosphere, sensational prose and intensely visual imagery are bound to appeal to science fiction and fantasy fans, particularly those who don't necessarily mind watching a rerun if it's worth a good scare.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Machine intelligence/consciousness and its interface with humanity form the central theme in Ouellette's first novel. The trappings of an honest intellectual exercise on the future of the computer are present here within the context of an espionage/adventure tale. Brought to life and then subverted by corporate and political interests, the supercomputer Deus struggles with its ever-growing sense of ethics, which points toward self-annihilation as the only viable course of action. The equation is altered by the creation of another rapidly evolving machine-based intellect that develops a human-oriented value system built upon relationships between a computer wizard, his lover, and a small boy. Well-rounded characters and a lively story make this high-tech thriller a first choice for any fiction collection. Elliott Swanson
. Didn't do all that much for me.