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The Digital Sea [Paperback]

Thomas K Carpenter
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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Book Description

December 19, 2010
It’s 2052. A new reality is just a download away. Decay is ubiquitious as the world's population shrinks under Sagan's Law. But no one cares as their lives are consumed by the Digital Sea: an immersive augmented reality that’s always on, seen through eye-screens and controlled by the mind. Zel Aurora, a skilled reality-hacker, can change the Digital Sea with a thought, but all that power can't save her daughter from a deadly disease. So Zel makes a deal with the Djed, a powerful crime lord that she's betrayed once before, to stop the new realities threatening his global empire. When the Djed sends along his murderous bodyguard that’s immune to her powers to make sure she completes the job, she’s forced to make a choice that may cost her daughter’s life.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Tom Carpenter resides near St. Louis with his wife Rachel and their two children. He's written a multitude of short stories and several novels based on the infinite possibilities of augmented reality. When he's not busy writing his next book, he's updating his blog The Future Digital Life (www.thomaskcarpenter.com), or the leading blog about augmented reality - Games Alfresco (www.gamesalfresco.com.)

Product Details

  • Paperback: 392 pages
  • Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (December 19, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1456484249
  • ISBN-13: 978-1456484248
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,871,413 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Thomas K. Carpenter's young adult trilogy, Gamers, has been called a cross between The Hunger Games and the Uglies trilogies by reviewers. His Kindle best selling short stories and novels can be found at all major online retailers. He lives in St. Louis with his wife, two kids, and one oafishly large labrador retriever. Visit him online at www.thomaskcarpenter.com.

The last novel in the Gamers trilogy, Coders, will be published in April of 2012.

Customer Reviews

Technology has taken over and very few people choose to live without it. 1000 + Books to Read  |  2 reviewers made a similar statement
The premise is intriguing; the novel is well written and the story well told. Alan L. Chase  |  7 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars I absolutely LOVED this book!! July 10, 2011
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I truly loved and enjoyed this book. I had no previous experience with this author and am looking forward to more from him. I am so very glad to learn from his website that this book is the first of a trilogy, YES!!!! :) :) The second installment, "The Godhead Machine", is supposed to be coming in November 2011 and the third, "Neochrome Aurora", in January 2013.

The year 2052 is certainly not far away at all and the thought of augmented reality being so prevalent is very exciting to me. I certainly love "real life" but I also feel that computers, the internet, various applications, can enhance our lives and experiences in ways we can't even comprehend yet.

The other reviewers (at least the ones up through 05/26/11) have hit all of the points that I feel are important and I especially feel that the review entitled "I want more!!" from May 26, 2011 by Melissa, a Reviewer for 1000 + Books to Read, reflects how I feel about this book and thus I won't rehash what she has so eloquently written.

This may be a bit overreaching but the character Zel Aurora reminds me of Lisbeth Salander from Stieg Larsson's trilogy that started with "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo", as does the writing in general.

Very well done book, thank you Mr. Carpenter!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By ricko
Format:Paperback
The confused world of augmented reality resurfaces in this mystery/spy novel set in the year 2052 by Thomas K. Carpenter. I only say that because this theme is my least favorite when I'm reading sci-fi, or fantasy novels. I'm reminded of Vernor Vinge's 'Rainbows End', the 2007 Hugo Award winner for best novel. I disliked that novel! Vernor spoke of a world in which " ...the virtual and the real are a seamless continuum, layers of reality built on digital views seen by a single person or millions, depending on your choice." Well, here we go again. The difference is that I didn't dislike Carpenter's novel. Don't get me wrong, I was still perplexed, but so were some of his characters. One of the main good characters, Zel Aurora thinks to herself on page 193... " Damn it. Even with you I don't always understand what's going on. It's like having a play in a foreign country explained to you. I hear the explanation, but I don't know what it means." Amen, Zel, I had the same problem reading this avant garde type novel. That being said, I thought the author highly competent. Some of the character's lines are clever; such as, the reporter, Jartelle, thinking about an affair he had with a girl named Anesha..." I cannot be so blind to think it is a relationship. Still, what's the difference, it's only a title. Journalist. Prostitute. Some say they are no different, and the latter pays better." There are quite a few of these kinds of snippets throughout the novel. This was a well written and thought- through novel that just happened to be about a topic that I don't like.

The story is about our world in the future where "Sagan's Law" has been enacted, a world-wide one child policy. The population is still too high and there are many devious plans to lower it further. The cost of health care is only available to the rich. Limbs can be regrown. ARNet computers ( the Digital Sea ) are embedded into the body in order for a person to change their outward appearance and viewed surroundings. But can you now be controlled and monitored by unknown forces? Can some people take this a step further and become invisible at times? These are some of the questions in this new complex world. Mr. Carpenter weaves a unique tale that tries to unravel this complicated and puzzling dilemma that man has enacted on himself. Well done, Mr. Carpenter, you had this reviewer guessing, chapter after chapter.

Our heroine is Zel Aurora, a reality hacker savant, who has fashioned her own augmented reality system called the Pandora. Her child lies in bed dying from a shaking sickness. She contacts the crime lord Djed, whom she has betrayed in the past, to seek employment in exchange for enough of funds to get hemangioblast therapy for her daughter, Liala. The Djed, who speaks to her as a projection, wants to find out who is trying to start a war between India and Pakistan. They are interfering with his business. She agrees to take the job, but must take Djed's Russian assassin, Sasha, with her. Meanwhile, a Japanese politician is beheaded by an invisible assassin and a seasoned reporter named, Jartelle, suspects a bigger situation brewing and starts to follow leads ( don't worry about all the "ands", I'm invoking polysyndeton syntax ). Jartelle stays one step ahead of Zel and Sasha as they seek the answer to the plot against humanity, seemingly from a mysterious corporation called Ecoverse. Carpenter writes some of the chases like it's an episode from the Keystone Cops! For example, Zel and Sasha arrive in a now dead New Orleans to see Quicksilver Spider, then to New York to see TenNinety and the Unseen gang, only to be sent to Siberia to see Fat Tennessee ( and he is super fat! ), and then sent to Free Africa South. And guess who was there first? Yes, Jartelle! Now the story gets exciting, and this is where I stop. Now that you have tasted a little of the plot, I suggest you grab your own copy of this China Mieville-like weird fiction novel, sans the neologisms.

One flaw I find in books of this type is that the author writes-in too many sidebar characters with names. It gets too hard for the reader to remember all the character's names, only to find out that they were menial at best. I haven't even mentioned: Mekena Dembo ( he's not one of the menials ), Kaydar Ayasha, Ava, the Jackal, Cutter, the twins, NURBS, or Ubiq to name a few. The reader will have a lot more empathy for characters when he can concentrate on three, or four people. But this was a enjoyable novel, even though I didn't like the theme.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars I want more!! May 26, 2011
Format:Paperback
Zel Aurora is a highly skilled hacker in a new age world that rides the Digital Sea. Zel's talents are highly sought after, especially by a dangerous crime lord named Djed who Zel once worked for and has been hiding from ever since.

Zel's main job now is her daughter, who is ill, and keeping them both hidden in a Digital world where information is a mere thought away. As Zel's daughter further deteriorates before her eyes she makes a deal with the devil, the very man she has been trying to avoid for years.. the Djed, in hopes that he may be able to save her daughters life.

The cost is high as Zel is sent out on a mission that may end up killing her before she can save her daughter. And if she doesn't succeed many more will lose their lives.

Lets Talk About It:

This book was so good. SO GOOD.

From the storyline to the characters to the sub stories, it all was fantastic.

The world in this book is an advanced technology world where everything and everyone is a part of the Digital Sea. Meaning the computers that we are used to are now a part of you so that you can change your appearance with a thought (and a downloaded app/software), the world you see around you can be cloaked with the scenery of your choice and it's all done via your mind. The Digital Sea is the world. Technology has taken over and very few people choose to live without it.

It doesn't sound that far out there does it? That's one of the things that grasped me most with this book and even had me talking about it with friends was that this book described a world that is not too far off in the future. That it could very well become our reality.

Zel is a bad ass character. Not only is she a highly skilled hacker she is also a high functioning autistic person. Her world is seen in numbers and from those numbers she creates Pandora, her operating system that is able to do more than even the experts have been able to do. She embarks on this journey to save her sick daughter from death and her only way to do is to work for, again, a very dangerous man named the Djed.

Zel isn't the only character in this book, though she is the main one. There's a journalist named Jartelle who is hot on the trail of a huge story that ends up being more than meets the eye and so many other characters who end up being a part of the story and crosses paths with Zel in the end.

I really enjoyed the structure of this book too. With there being so many key players I appreciated the chapters displaying the characters name so I easily knew where we were at in the story. It all blended together very well too as each piece layered into the next to great the whole effect.

I really hope that there is a follow up book. I want more of Zel and the ending seemed to leave an opening for something to come next.

If this sounds like something you might enjoy even just a little bit go pick it up, you won't regret it!

Melissa
Reviewer for 1000 + Books to Read
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars An engrossing if occasionally confusing read.
"The Digital Sea" takes place almost 40 years hence, in a world in which most people live in an "augmented reality," a kind of customized, immersive digital veneer that can mask... Read more
Published 5 days ago by C. ANZIULEWICZ
5.0 out of 5 stars Crossing the cyber-line
In "The Digital Sea," we're immersed in what David Foster Wallace called Total Noise: "the tsunami of available fact, context, and perspective. Read more
Published 1 month ago by P. Salus
3.0 out of 5 stars Speculative fiction and a mystery unraveled
I give this book 3.5 stars out of 5, but since Amazon won't let me do half stars, I'm giving it a 3/5 -- I can't justify a 4/5 rating. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Chad Cloman
3.0 out of 5 stars Fast-paced Sci-Fi novel exploring augmented reality
"The Digital Sea" is a science fiction novel set in the future where people use ARNet computers integrated into their bodies to create an altered view of their surroundings and how... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Kyle L. Rhynerson
4.0 out of 5 stars Reality is What You Think It Is
Many have described the current world we live in as the `Age of the Computer'. But where we are now pales compared to the world imagined in this work, where, via implants, a... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Patrick Shepherd
5.0 out of 5 stars Tell me, are you all jacked in?
All the latest apps downloaded, bluetooth enabled, your whole life in the palm of your hand? What if you could just have your phone downloaded into your brain? Read more
Published 2 months ago by Sally A. Wolf
4.0 out of 5 stars A Fascinating Exploration on the Nature of Reality
When I first heard of the title, "The Digital Sea," I imagined that the book might deal with submarine warfare in the 21st Century. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Alan L. Chase
2.0 out of 5 stars Creative concept wasted by a well-trodden plot
I haven't read any science fiction novel in a long while. I chanced to read this one by way of getting a free copy of this book from the author. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Raghu Nathan
4.0 out of 5 stars VERY CREATIVE NOVEL
I am generally not a fan of science fiction and the digital world is not well known to me (hey, I still use a flip phone). So, this is not a book I would have picked to read. Read more
Published 4 months ago by J. B. Perkins
4.0 out of 5 stars Wading Into the Digital Sea
"There is no truth in the Digital Sea." That may be true for the Digital Sea, the widespread alternate reality universe in which people choose to live their lives in the mid-21st... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Chance Lee
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