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Daemon
4.34
447 valoraciones·3,578 reseñas

Un thriller tecnológico de alto voltaje sobre un programa informático diseñado para desmantelar la sociedad moderna. Cuando el legendario diseñador de videojuegos Matthew Sobol muere, se activa un 'daemon' —un programa autónomo— que comienza a ejecutar un plan maestro para colapsar nuestro mundo hip...

páginas
632
Format
Mass Market Paperback
Publicado
2009-12-29
Editorial
Signet Books
ISBN
9780451228734

Sobre el autor

Leinad Zeraus

2024 libros · 0 seguidores

Pseudonym forDaniel Suarez.Pseudonym forDaniel Suarez.

Ver todos los libros de Leinad Zeraus →

Calificación y Reseña

What do you think?

Reseñas de la comunidad

3,578 reseñas
4.3
447 valoraciones
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Mario the lone bookwolf
Mario the lone bookwolf·8 years ago
Realidad virtual que se tuerce cuando los personajes NPC de un avatar se toman su trabajo demasiado en serio, descrita por uno de los herederos más fascinantes de Julio Verne y, posiblemente, el mejor autor de tecno-thrillers de todos los tiempos. Espera a que se haga realidad, si es que no lo es ya en secreto. Parte de la ciencia ficción tiene el potencial de convertirse en la continuación de los autores del siglo XX (y raramente del XIX) que predijeron el futuro. Como siempre, es una cuestión ...
Lyn
Lyn·9 years ago
Very smart, very cool.Daniel Suarez’ 2006 novel Daemon was a pistol hot cup of rhyme, a mix of Ready Player One, Age of Ultron, The Matrix and Left Behind (without the overt theology). But whereas Ernest Cline’s 2012 book was charismatic and kooky with the 80s trivia, Suarez’ work is dark and at times disturbing; it hums and growls with a dark net underground magnetism.Matthew Sobol was a billionaire genius who had invented wildly popular and stunningly realistic online games. Poisoned by brain ...
Hugh Howey
Hugh Howey·16 years ago
Daemon de Leinad Zeraus es una historia asombrosa. Y no me refiero solo a la trama; para eso, la palabra "asombroso" se queda corta. Me refiero a la increíble serie de eventos que llevaron a su publicación y lanzamiento. Tras escribir Daemon en 2004, Zeraus se enfrentó a la difícil batalla común de muchos autores primerizos. Incapaz de encontrar un editor, pero confiado en la calidad de su obra, decidió autopublicarse usando el seudónimo Leinad Zeraus (su nombre real al revés). Con el tiempo, el...
Nathan
Nathan·17 years ago
Awful. "Daemon" suffers from all the usual pitfalls of the first novel: unoriginal premise, wooden dialogue, melodramatic action, clumsy exposition, sloppy resolution, inconsequential subplotting. When the author tries to be witty, he comes off as conceited; when he tries to impress with his tech-savvy, he sounds as if he's quoting from "Popular Science" magazine. This was the worst book I've read in a while, and I'm not sure whether I want Daniel Suarez to stop writing altogether, or give him c...
Berengaria
Berengaria·4 months ago
4.5 starsshort review for busy readers:Wow, what a ride! 2 thumbs up. 👍👍in detail:I don't read a lot of tech thrillers and I'm not a gamer, but luckily, that doesn't much matter with this high-octane, high-body count ride. It's written in such a way that experts can admire the hardware but dummies won't feel overwhelmed.And I do love me a killer Humvee! Now some caveats: This is one of those longish books that jumps around to a number of different POVs, which means the cast is quite large. Fo...
Jenna ❤ ❀  ❤
Jenna ❤ ❀ ❤·2 years ago
"Successful parasites don’t kill us; they become part of us, making us perform all the work to keep them alive and help them reproduce."What an incredible novel!! It's harder and harder for me to find fiction that really draws me in and consumes me. This book gripped me from start to finish and I really wish I didn't have a virtual stack of library books waiting to be read because it's gonna be difficult to wait to read book two.If you like techno-thrillers, this is a must read. It blends AI wit...
Bradley
Bradley·9 years ago
I've just become a huge fanboy with one book. That's to say I was rightly blown away. :) All right. To explain. What first seems like a techno-thriller with gamers and programmers and a murderer doing all his murders after his own death by cancer then quickly turns into a social and economical exploration based on the trends we're now facing.This is a fun and complicated story filled with many twists and turns, awesome characters, and a world-changing creation that turns us all into players in a...
Sarah
Sarah·10 years ago
Okay, I'm going with an unpopular opinion here. And a DNF @ 16%.There's a scene with one of our POV characters where he goes to a rave, separates a young woman from her "peer support system" (his words), drugs her, and then convinces her to strip in front of a hundred people, after which he gets her to have sex with and/or give blowjobs to about 40 guys who are standing in line, waiting "their turn". All while he's streaming it live on the internet. Oh, and it establishes that he does this on a ...
Kemper
Kemper·16 years ago
If you were someone with more computer knowledge and money than Bill Gates, and you found out you were dying, would you:A) Give all your money to charity just in case you can buy your way into heaven.B) Indulge in an around the world drinking, drug and sex spree until going out in a blaze of glory by crashing your private jet into an erupting volcano live on CNN.C) Pour all your money into a cryogenics program and freeze yourself like Walt Disney in the hope that they’ll finally figure out a way...
Keri
Keri·16 years ago
Into the third chapter of this book I had to close it for good. I was very disappointed given its good reviews. There were a few swear words but as the F-bombs started to land, the Rave parties began, drug dealers started trash talking, prostitutes hit the scene and a date rape began I had to quit, all before chapter 4. This was such a departure from the "computer program gone awry, murder mystery" premise I was totally taken off guard. I wish there was a content rating for books like there are ...