Sunday, April 1, 2012

The Necronaut by Michael R. Pilinski (Review).

From a tragic accident the antagonist Justin and Leah, skydiving one-day... What starts out as Justin being held under life-support at a conventional hospital, Doctors Luthor and Diana Cain solicit Leah and offers Justin an alternative to conventional life-support. Leah reluctantly agreeing to let the Cain's experiment with her husband, they proceed to put them into their scientific experiement through a procedure called "biostatis", where a computer system with a wordly capacity gathers Justin's conscious state inside a torus, with all of the encoding mechanisms and hyper-scientific lingo involved, while his body is maintained in a frozen state (time stood still), this Electro-Conscious Entity could be transferred between torus's and manipulated by scientist assuming they have the same "copied" technology. The Cain's were able to acquire the necessary equipment through the National Security Agency, and as conspiracies unfold, the death of Luthor, Leah's desire to be with her husband again, and the transformation of Justin's Electro-conscious existence made the Science Fiction read incredibly complicated on many levels, but in a very strange sort of way believable to the science fiction imagination. Mr. Pilinski makes fiction look believable within this book, you would have to read between the lines, and have some kind of quantum-electro and psychological background to prove that this story is truly fiction, separating the believable from the unbelievable. Hard to follow at times, lost in the psycho-technical babble, but still a delightful story and a suitable ending.

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