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Bandwidth (An Analog Novel) Hardcover – May 1, 2018
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Eliot Peper
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Print length252 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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Publisher47North
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Publication dateMay 1, 2018
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Dimensions5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
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ISBN-101503954420
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ISBN-13978-1503954427
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Peper does a fabulous job depicting power and its trappings and giving a sense of super-powerful, super-competent sociopaths…It’s a fine science fiction novel that grapples with power, consent, manipulation, equity, duty, and friendship, where no one is entirely irredeemable and even the heroes need redemption.” —Cory Doctorow, Boing Boing
“Eliot Peper’s Bandwidth is a thoughtful meditation on the ethics of power among those who broker it…Peper manages a great deal of complexity without sacrificing clarity or pace, and I read it all in a single fascinated sitting…The depth and vulnerability of Dag’s perspective, his loneliness, and the value he places on his few real friendships, kept Bandwidth feeling real and urgent.” —The New York Times Book Review
“A very credibly rendered near future…Peper guides his story with a sure hand, lacing its narrative with issues and references that resonate powerfully in the age of net neutrality, algorithms, and social media hacks.” —Publishers Weekly
“Peper’s fast-moving thriller strikes a good balance between fast action, believable plot, and interesting characters and is worth a look.” —Kirkus Reviews
“A riveting novel…combining a thriller plot with a deeper introspection of technology and its effect on our actions and our futures. It’s an engaging, electric read, but also one that forces us to confront the state of the world today and our impact as an industry on politics.” —TechCrunch
“The techno-thriller novel that we need right now…What does fake news even mean when you can no longer distinguish reality?...Gripping.” —Ars Technica
“Our fear of diverging worldviews and loss of privacy provide the foundation for the futuristic political thriller Bandwidth, in which a brain interface keeps humans constantly connected to ‘the feed.’ Up-and-coming lobbyist Dag Calhoun quickly discovers the feed has a back door that an idealistic group of activists are leveraging to manipulate the behavior of VIPs through suggestive tweaks. When Dag is drawn inside the activist’s cadre, he has to come to terms with the ethics behind invasive cognitive nudging. Bandwidth creates a compelling world that reflects on our present reality, skewed as it may be.” —Chicago Review of Books
“Technology, not only social media but also the news feeds we consume, changes the ways we look at everything. Good and bad actors manipulate us via that technology in ways that we’re only now beginning to appreciate. Bandwidth tells a really good story and illustrates exactly how that happens.” —Craig Newmark, founder of Craigslist
“A smart techno-thriller that plays out the near future of data immersion, the digital divide, and climate change with mind-expanding effectiveness.” —Malka Older, author of Infomocracy
“Spectacular near-term science fiction. Game upon game upon game.” —Brad Feld, managing director at Foundry Group
“An all-too-plausible thriller of power, morality, and global consequences. What would you do to wield influence? How far would you go to wield it for good? Bandwidth’s answers may disturb you.” —Ramez Naam, author of Nexus
“Bandwidth blows the lid off today’s techno optimists, revealing a thrilling and all-too-realistic future in which the ubiquitous ‘feed’—an immersive algorithm used by millions—becomes a tool for high-stakes blackmail, with climate change hanging in the balance. An eye-opening look at how simple, everyday technologies can change our world, one notification at a time.” —Andrew Chamberlain, chief economist at Glassdoor
About the Author
Eliot Peper is the author of Cumulus, True Blue, Neon Fever Dream, and The Uncommon Series. His near-future thrillers have been praised by The Verge, Popular Science, Businessweek, io9, and Ars Technica. Eliot is an editor at Scout and an adviser to entrepreneurs and investors. He has helped build various technology businesses, survived dengue fever, translated Virgil’s Aeneid from the original Latin, worked as an entrepreneur-in-residence at a venture-capital firm, and explored the ancient Himalayan kingdom of Mustang. His writing has appeared in Harvard Business Review, TechCrunch, and the Chicago Review of Books; and he has been a speaker at places such as Google, Qualcomm, Future in Review, and the Conference on World Affairs.
Visit www.eliotpeper.com to get personal reading recommendations from Eliot and learn more about him. He is also active on social media at twitter.com/eliotpeper and facebook.com/eliotpeper.
Product details
- Publisher : 47North; 1st edition (May 1, 2018)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 252 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1503954420
- ISBN-13 : 978-1503954427
- Item Weight : 14.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
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Best Sellers Rank:
#1,419,249 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3,865 in Vigilante Justice Thrillers
- #3,922 in Technothrillers (Books)
- #5,044 in Cyberpunk Science Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Customer reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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In this near future world, current illegal drugs are legalized. With no illicit drugs to profit from, large cartels and other shady organizations are now forced to manipulate bandwidth for profit. This sets the tone for the first part of the story. After a near death experience followed by an unnerving incident in a hotel, Dag discovers that he has been exposed and information from his own feed is being used against him. This sends him on a mission to hunt down the person or person(s) responsible for the increasingly disturbing occurrences exposing the vulnerability of his feed that, up to this point, he believed was impenetrable by anyone outside the Commonwealth. What follows is a nicely paced tale of espionage and deceit. There are several twists that will have you repeatedly wondering who the real good and bad guys are. There isn't a lot of action but there is plenty of good dialogue and interaction between characters. Character development is pretty good and vital to the plot of information manipulation and exploitation. Overall, I came away entertained.
Combine this instant access with the political realities of a political lobbyist and you have stepped into the world of Dag Calhoun. Add in today’s accusations of news manipulation but make the twists more insidious, more personal. What kind of power could be wielded if one could manipulate the thoughts of a single person by affecting his or her personal feed? With this power, is doing what is right still ethical?
Author Eliot Peper captures this world, fleshing it out for the reader and giving it life. As we descend into a realm of political intrigue, the author deftly weaves a tale that details the realities of Dag’s life, exposing the dangerous path he sometimes must tread.
While light on the science aspect, the portrait of a man tossed by the whirlwinds of his own creations was fascinating. Dag is a complex character, torn by the desire to forge a different trail even as he is followed by the demons of his past. The behind-the-action scenes are realistic, providing the perfect backdrops. The author’s prose is descriptive and tight, with a matching plot that kept me turning pages from the beginning all the way to the end. Highly recommended. Five stars.
The book is very over written at times to the point of pretentiousness. It's not just he took a sip of whiskey, it's "He inhaled and sipped. Thick with Isle of Skye peat and brine, the whiskey evoked long, hard winters weathered in stout hovels battered by pitiless North Atlantic storms." Typically this kind of writing drives me crazy. As I got deeper into the story, it no longer bothered me quite as much.
The "feed" is not an entirely new idea. I have come across it in several other novels of the future. What is a very creative twist is at the heart of the story and is neatly connected to the current controversy attached with various forms of social media. We are just learning how easily it is to be manipulated in this new world; this book ratchets that worry up tenfold.
The cast of characters is quite eclectic. A few billionaires, quite a few products of the foster care system, lobbyists, several memorable Aide-de-camps and a very talented maître d'. They're all well formed and stride across very unique settings.
I always worry about picking up any "book 1". I am not always interested in beginning a relationship with a multiple book series; there are just too many good books out there to read. I am very glad to report that this book as a beginning, a middle and an end. While the characters could definitely live on, there is no need to keep reading to see how this particular story ends. I appreciate that.
Finally any book that gives me a new quote to add to my list of favorites has a soft spot in my heart. Thanks for the following!
“Shankar Vedantam wrote that those who travel with the current will always feel they are good swimmers, while those who swim against the current may never realize they are better swimmers than they imagine,”
Top reviews from other countries
I'd give it a miss if I were you. Try William Gibson instead.
In the beginning I could see myself taking Dag’s attitude of “I’m alright”, “it’s all part of the job” and “it will never happen”, because the alternative is too terrible to take seriously.
In this story the author shows that we can affect global issues if we change our mindset and swim against the current, instead of going with the flow.
I would recommend Bandwidth to people who like ‘Near Future” stories that are more situations than science.
This book has been added to my “Need More Of The Same” shelf on Goodreads.
As an author myself I enjoy supporting other writers by reviewing their work, a good investment of the time I put in to finish the book. If you enjoy reading books, I would encourage you to pay it forward by leaving a few words on the site you bought it from. Just one word is enough, although a negative comment would be more helpful with a little explanation. Try it sometime.
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