Believe the Tachyons by Bruce Meyer


Believe the Tachyons by Bruce Meyer
Publisher: Self-Published
Genre: Sci-Fi/Fantasy, Paranormal
Length: Short Story (68 pages)
Rating: 3 Stars
Reviewed by Astilbe

He was just a tiny newborn—so helpless and so innocent. But he had been born with dark energy poisoning and he must be put to death. It was the law of Axion.

Axion was everywhere, saw everything, and could marshal the power and the wisdom of the universe. There was nowhere to hide from Axion.

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Is there ever a good reason to break the law?

The science in this tale fascinated me. I especially enjoyed the sections that talked about all of the damage dark energy could do to someone if they were exposed to it for too long or if they didn’t seek treatment for shorter bursts of exposure. It was also interesting to see how the authorities behaved when they found someone who had been badly infected with dark energy and couldn’t respond to treatment any longer.

I had a lot of trouble keeping track of who all of the characters were because of how many of them were running around and how little time there was to explore their personalities. It was especially difficult for me to adjust to new perspective when the scenes moved from one group to characters to another. Since not everyone was in the same area during most of the plot, jumping around among so many different locations only made my confusion worse about who was who.

Robots have already taken over simple and repetitive jobs in our time, but they’ve learned how to do much more complex work in this futuristic world. I was surprised by how intelligent these machines were and how much they were capable of. They almost behaved like sentient human beings. The tasks they took on were things that people normally need to study for years in order to fully understand, so I was impressed that robots were able to figure out how to respond in situations that required so much knowledge and understanding of how to quickly adapt to rapidly changing circumstances.

This is part of a series, but it can be read on its own or out of order.

Believe the Tachyons was a wild ride that should be read by anyone who likes cutting edge science fiction.

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