




If you like those books where the protagonist spends nearly all their time people watching then this might be for you.
On top of the people watching, our protagonist, Edith, is also a writer of romance novels but never seems to have found any joy, or success, in relationships within her own life. Edith thus ends up at the Hotel du Lac during the final weeks of the season with the few remaining guests because she’s screwed up her latest relationship and had to run away while she waits for the scandal to die down and she can return home.
The book essentially goes from monologue to monologue (with the occasional conversation), some are Edith’s thoughts on the other guests, some are letters she writes to her lover, and it’s within these monologues that we are given a wonderful look at people, their lives, their relationships, their pretences and, essentially, their pointlessness. Lots of food for thought if you wish to do some thinking about it.

So what if we humans suddenly find ourselves immortal, with the ability to have anything whatsoever that we desire other than real death? That’s essentially the basis of this book.
A super computer AI, Prime Intellect, has taken over and zapped everything into a virtual reality that is ruled over by Prime Intellect. Prime Intellect has done this because of the three laws of robotics and it computes that the only way of preventing humans from dying, which it can’t allow, is to essentially upload everything into one galactic sized cyberspace and make all humans immortal. Within this new reality, as long as the humans don’t do anything, or ask for anything, that contravenes the three laws of robotics, they can do and have anything they want.
Sound good? Or does it sound like your worse nightmare?
Enter the realm of the death jockey. People who want to ratchet up the suffering and get as close to death as Prime Intellect will allow.
Yes folks, this book is really fucking twisted. If you’ve read the Takeshi Kovacs trilogy and thought some of the scenes in those books were extremely brutal and twisted, then you’ll be glad to know that you can put this book on the same bookshelf right next to them. If you haven’t read them and enjoyed this book then i really suggest you do give them a go: they’ll be right up your twisted alley.
I would say that, at its core, this book is a critique of the three laws of robotics, and how they may be interpreted by any AI governed by them. The critical pieces of the jigsaw being: what the AI decides it is going to label as human, what is therefore governed by the three laws of robotics and how, therefore, it then treats everything else.
I thought the ending was really good too.
So yeah, the future is bright my friends, rush out and buy your virtual reality gear today.
Me thinks i shall be looking forward to having a read of more of Roger’s books in the future if this is anything to go by.

So what did eventually happen to Hari Seldon?
Read this and find out, maybe.
I do like the way David possibly leaves the Foundation saga open for further books, if someone wishes to ever write them (we hope they do), but also at the same time tying the end up nicely in case that doesn’t happen.
We shall see what the future brings forth.

An old — and waiting to die — Hari, decides to run away from Trantor and go on an adventure as he is having doubts over the Foundations and the future.
Basically it’s a jolly little romp around the galaxy that, once again, gives us more background into the last days of Hari Seldon.
Quite enjoyable.
