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Most helpful customer reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Remarkable thriller about a post-apocalyptic world,
By Andrew Fenn (Toronto, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Plague Year (Mass Market Paperback)
This book has possibly the best opening line I've ever read: "They ate Jorgensen first." How can you not want to read it after that? It's a total no-holds-barred thriller right from page 1 with a great premise: a worldwide nanotech plague has wiped out virtually all warm-blooded life. The only survivors are those who live about 10 000 feet, where the machines can't function. Carlson does a great job of exploring the implications of people trying to survive in such a harsh environment. The story switches back and forth between the efforts of a nanotech researcher on the International Space Station who is seeking a cure, and a band of survivors on a California mountaintop who must make a desperate journey below the plague-line in a bid for survival. Not to be missed! Pick this one up!
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.1 out of 5 stars (91 customer reviews) 47 of 47 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Much better than PW would have you believe,
By Craig Larson - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Plague Year (Mass Market Paperback)
I thoroughly enjoyed Jeff Carlson's debut, though I do recognize it's not great "literature" or anything. But it was the perfect summertime read and an engrossing blend of intriguing science fiction, fast-moving thriller, and outright horror. This could make for a great movie if the right person came along. Carlson posits a new post-apocalyptic world: the Earth after a plague of nano-machines has killed off most of the world's population. Since the machines don't work at a certain level of atmospheric pressure, the survivors are now living on mountaintops and at high elevation. The U.S. government has relocated to Leadville, Colorado, the city at one of the highest elevations in America. We follow two different stories, that of a group of astronauts at the International Space Station who are desperately trying to come up with a cure for the nano-plague, and a group of survivors in California, struggling to survive on a mountaintop near a ski area. Carlson's story slowly draws these two disparate storylines together in a very believable and intriguing way as it becomes apparent one of the California survivors may know something about the plague's origin. A grim and sometimes depressing look at a possible future. Somewhat reminiscent of Wil McCarthy's _Bloom_, which also looks at the remnants of humanity in the wake of a nano-disaster.
25 of 25 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Solid followthrough,
By Grumm - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Plague Year (Mass Market Paperback)
A nano-virus outbreak occurs in the San Francisco Bay Area and spreads to the rest of the state in a matter of days. Within a week, the continent is infected. After 2 months the entire world. The virus is simple. It devours most mammal and bird flesh and makes a copy of itself. But it self destructs at .7 atm air pressure. Thus the last remnants of the human race cling to any mountaintop over ~9600 ft elevation. New wars and old hatreds flare up as the remaining scientists attempt to solve the nanovirus in India, Colorado, and aboard the International Space Station.What I liked the most about this book was the little scientific details the author used. Unlike most pop-sci writers today, he actually sticks with his premise and considers all the consequences, both social and environmental. For instance, insects now rule anything below 10000 feet. China had time to militarily annex Tibet. Russia is struggling against Afghanistan. Germany, France and Italy fight over the Alps... He also brings up the science of nano tech, although it is only a surface view. I would have liked more there, but the flow of the plot would probably have been interrupted. Anyway, I highly recommend it for people who like Post-apocalyptic stuff, or "realism" sci-fi. 21 of 21 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very Intense, Near Future Thriller,
By Lou Anders - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Plague Year (Mass Market Paperback)
A grim and gritty near future in which a nanite that eats flesh has escaped from a research lab and decimated the world. The very small silver lining on this very dark cloud is that it can't function and breaks down above a certain elevation, so tiny pockets of humanity exist on mountain tops, slowly running out of resources and going through the expected horrors of surviving in isolated communities where hunger and desperation has had a devastating effect on civilized behavior. These few survivors can make quick runs down into this "invisible sea" however, scavenging as quickly as they can before they feel the burning sensation that indicates the nano-plague has found them and started feasting. At which point they have to hightail it back uphill before they loose too many pieces. After a few of these runs, you really start to show it. The novel is gruesome, dramatic, exhilarating, and, would make a great film. Highly recommended.
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