Praise for Daniel H. Wilson's Amped
A fast-paced narrative, not too far away at all from everyday experience, that treats an unsettling question: How long will tolerance last once you can buy a better brain?
The Wall Street Journal
With Amped, Wilson has taken another step to claiming the late Michael Crichton's crown as the public's sci-fi thriller writer of choice. . . . Wilson hits all the notes in the right order, and the book s pace is relentless. And perhaps best of all, he leavens his cautionary message with good-sized dollops of fistfights and gunfire. Amped might have a commendable message about tolerance and civil rights, but Wilson doesn t let the message get in the way of our fun.
Richmond Times-Dispatch
A wild ride. . . . Wilson taps into something primal with Amped. . . . Wilson is a roboticist by trade, and he combines his background in science and engineering with a knack for fast-paced narrative. . . . [Amped taps into] some of the deep questions about medical ethics, the social effects of technology, and the way that class and politics make technological questions much harder to resolve
BoingBoing. net
A fast-paced, futuristic thriller that ll make you think, especially about the dangers of us-versus-them demagoguery.
Fredericksburg Free Lance Star
Absorbing . . . Wilson is no stranger to exploring the intersection of technology and humankind. In Amped, certain individuals have technology embedded under their skin. These humans are smarter and faster than norm and because most of the federally funded upgrades went to the needy, the formerly dumb and afflicted amps are scaring the pure humans. The not-so-distant future is a hotbed of class war and civil unrest.
Portland Mercury
A fast-paced narrative, not too far away at all from everyday experience, that treats an unsettling question: How long will tolerance last once you can buy a better brain? Mr. Wilson recognizes that, in the modern world, the battlegrounds would be legal and political, not just physical.
The Wall Street Journal
Fast-paced . . . fascinating . . . for hardcore sci-fi readers, Amped offers plenty of juicy details to savor. As he showed in his bestselling thriller Robopocalypse, Daniel H. Wilson can write. The Carnegie Mellon-trained roboticist has a voice and style very much like Stephen King. But unlike King, Wilson also has the chops to base the weird beings in his stories on hard science.
Wired s Geek Dad
Entertaining . . . propulsive . . . Amped [is] a gripping story of a community of Amps trying to make it in the middle of a prejudiced Oklahoma, where regular humans strike back at anyone with a telltale port on their temple. A piece of trenchant political science fiction about how we mistreat those who are different.
The Onion A. V. Club
Amped beckons back to the Civil Rights era, when the definition and rights of American citizens were called into question.
BookPage
Wilson keeps the action and fear-based prejudice ever-present without sacrificing depth. The story s heart is the moral quandary Owen faces once he knows his implant only responds to his deepest thoughts, keeping the reader wondering how far he will go and how much he is willing to sacrifice.
Publishers Weekly
Provocative . . . A thoughtful, well-written novel which deals with the often tense interplay between machines and humans. Wilson, whose prose is always a step above the norm, is at his strongest creating amp augmented action sequences and in conjuring situations which explore the boundaries between humankind and its technological creations.
Kirkus Reviews
Thrilling . . . First he gave us helpful advice for the robot uprising, then he wrote the robot war novel Robopocalypse. Now Daniel H. Wilson is turning his attention to the plight of cyborgs and posthumans with his dystopian new novel Amped.
I09. com
Wilson s newest novel, Amped, shares with its predecessor [Robopocalypse] a solid basis in current scientific technology in this case, neural implants that treat a variety of conditions. Amped imagines a not-too-distant world, when these superabled people made stronger, smarter, faster by the devices in their heads are perceived as a threat to unaltered or pure humans.
Tulsa World
This is a terrific book on any number of levels, doing what sf has always been able to do best: showing us a possible future so that we can not only attempt to avoid it, but we can also look at its echoes as they already exist in our own time. The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
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