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When the Sparrow Falls

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Neil Sharpson's When the Sparrow Falls illuminates authoritarianism, complicity, and identity in the digital age, in a darkly-funny, frightening and touching story that recalls Philip K. Dick, John LaCarré and Kurt Vonnegut in equal measure.
Welcome to the Caspian Republic. The last bastion of true humanity in a world given over to artificial intelligence.
Stray from the path towards anything "machine" and the state will correct you.

When propagandist Paulo Xirau dies, and is discovered to himself be a "machine", State Security Agent Nikolai South is given a new assignment he could hardly want less: chaperone the widow, Lily, the only "machine" visitor ever invited from the outside world, and help her determine what happened to her husband.
Nikolai knows it will be nearly impossible to complete the job without running afoul of the Party—but when he sees that Lily bears an eerie resemblance to his late wife, Nikolai stumbles on a larger plot, one that exposes all the lies he's told himself and which may bring down the Republic for good.
A Macmillan Audio production from Tor Books

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 22, 2021
      Sharpson’s provocative debut, adapted from his play The Caspian Sea, takes readers to the early 23rd-century Caspian Republic, an authoritarian nation-state reminiscent of Cold War–era Eastern Europe, where the remnants of pure humanity hold out against an artificial intelligence-controlled world. When a popular Caspian journalist dies and is discovered to have been an AI in disguise, his estranged AI wife, Lily, is dispatched from the outside world to identify the body. Nikolai South, a long-serving, unambitious State Security agent for the Republic is assigned as Lily’s liaison, only to be rocked by her uncanny resemblance to his own late wife. During their time together, South must determine if Lily is involved in a plan to smuggle digitally converted human consciousnesses out of the Republic—and along the way, he becomes caught between warring intelligence agencies and learns dark truths about the Republic’s origins. Sharpson skillfully evokes an atmosphere of paranoia, duplicity, and secrecy, while using the conflict between humans and AIs to probe themes of self-awareness, identity, and memory. As Sharpson pushes the narrative beyond South’s present and into an increasingly messy future, he showcases the untenable nature of the Caspian Republic and its corrupt framework. The result is a thoughtful sci-fi thriller that skillfully blends a retro spy aesthetic with future technology. Agent: Jennie Goloboy, Donald Maass Literary.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Is the soul of a human found in flesh and bone, or is it some ephemeral consciousness that can't be touched? And what if it could? Narrator Jake Fairbrother gently probes these questions in his performance of an audiobook that asks listeners to examine the essence of mortality. If that essence could be downloaded into a new body, who is to say which is real? With a slight British accent, Fairbrother speaks in nervous, hushed tones as an agent of the neo-Soviet state of Caspian performs a mission so secret that even he is kept in the dark. Fairbrother's pleasant delivery allows the listener to share the journey of discovery that follows with Nikolai South, a pawn in a cold war between "intelligent" machines and the last true humans. M.S. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine

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