Ratings70
Average rating3.9
In the near future, the experimental nano-drug Nexus can link human together, mind to mind. There are some who want to improve it. There are some who want to eradicate it. And there are others who just want to exploit it. When a young scientist is caught improving Nexus, he's thrust over his head into a world of danger and international espionage -- for there is far more at stake than anyone realizes.
Featured Series
3 primary booksNexus is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2012 with contributions by Ramez Naam.
Reviews with the most likes.
I really like this. The narrator took a little bit to get used too but after a while he grew on me. Only gave it a 4 rather than a 5 because I just wanted a little bit more detail in the tech. I guess I wanted just a little bit more Neal Stephenson. I think it would have added more to the story. Looking forward to the next 2.
Fantastic ideas abound. This feels like a modern update of Snow Crash with the VR swapped for a neural interface. The Nexus series manages to be thought provoking and have great action/thriller elements at the same time. I highly recommend checking it out
Executive Summary: Fascinating, enticing, thrilling, terrifying.
Audio book: It's Luke Daniels. If you don't know that means it's a good audio book without me saying, you've been missing out. This book has been on my radar for awhile, and I already owned the ebook. The fact that Luke Daniels did the audio and that there was a cheap whipsersync upgrade got me to finally pull the trigger. Yet another reason to thank Luke Daniels!
Full Review
I wish there were more books like this. It's totally in my wheelhouse. Not quite Cyberpunk, but close. Sci-Fi that is smart, plausible, and not overly dystopian. And it's well written, with interesting and well developed characters. It's hard to believe it's a debut novel.
This is one of those books that I kept thinking about even when I wasn't reading it. The ideas here are so thought provoking.
I've wanted to have the internet in my head for at least 15 years. Maybe longer. Instant access to all the information in the world? I mean smart phones are great and all, but the interface is clunky. Just think it and bam. Programming your brain? Where do I sign up?
Except.. Opening yourself up to cyber viruses, brain hacking, or even just internet trolls? Frightening.
Everything here is pretty grey. Is Nexus OS good? Is it bad? It seems to have both positive and negative potential. Some of those in favor of it appear to have the best of intentions. Yet at the same time, some of those opposed to it, do as well. Whose right? Should the government block certain research and technologies for good of it's citizens?
And at the core of it all, Nexus is a drug. I've never been a drug user. I don't think I've even been drunk in over 10 years. So the idea of needing drugs is a big turn off to me personally. My main disappointment in this book is the general lack of consequences of the technology.
I don't mean the possible bad things that someone can do to you/your brain. What does Nexus do to your brain? Is it addictive? What are the long term effects of constant use? Hopefully these things will be explored in the later novels.
Apart from that though, this book was really great. I was always eager to pick it back up. I've already jumped right into the second book and have blown through it pretty quickly.
If you want a smart, well written, thought provoking sci-fi novel, definitely give this book a try.
Pros: lots of action, interesting characters, thought provoking, accessible science
Cons: some of the characters were underused, not as much emotional connection with characters as I would have liked
Kaden Lane and a small group of other brilliant college students come up with a way to add programmable code to Nexus 3, a drug that allows people to communicated telepathically. Their still incomplete code, which has the potential to transform humans into transhumans, puts them and their upgraded Nexus 5 on the hit list of the Emerging Risks Directorate, a subsection of Homeland Security, taxed with maintaining laws restricting research into certain areas of science. Kaden believes in the best of humanity, and knows that Nexus 5 could do great things for people. ERD officer Samantha Cataranes has seen the worst that mind altering drugs can do, and believes - along with her organization - that Nexus 5 will be horribly abused.
This is a novel that examines the morality of augmenting humans to help them become more than human and how the tools of such augmentation can be used to benefit and harm people. Both Kaden and Sam start the book firmly entrenched in their positions, but the events of the story make them both question what they believe. This questioning is thought provoking for the reader, for whom the various pros and cons aren't immediately obvious, but also allow the characters the chance to grow as individuals.
There's a fair amount of action, culminating in numerous showdowns at the end of the book.
I loved that Naam has an ‘extras' section at the end of the book where he explains the science that he extrapolated from to come up with Nexus and the other scientific advances in the book. It's amazing the things we're currently capable of, and both inspiring and terrifying to see what might come next. The science contained in the book is clearly and concisely explained. There are no long expository passages weighing the book down. It starts fast paced and continues so throughout.
I had two complaints about the book. The first was that one of the characters was underused, in that I expected interesting things to happen with that person's storyline but nothing really came of it. The second is that though you really get into Sam and Kaden's heads, you don't feel a close connection to them, or the other people who they interact with in the book. When the bodies started piling up I didn't really care about anyone that was dying. I wasn't too afraid for Sam and Kaden, mainly due to Sam's augmentations, but again, I wasn't as invested in them as I wanted to be.
This isn't a subgenre of SFF that I normally read, so I was afraid I'd find the science over my head. Naam does a great job of making the science accessible and the action fast and furious. There's enough down time to appreciate the difficult position Kaden is in while wondering how (and if) he'll escape it. It's a book that makes you think about science and technology and where we're headed as well as what role governments should play - if any - with regards to regulating the advancements to come. In other words, it's a great hard sf novel.