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Breakpoint

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Air Force Combat Controller Dallas O'Halloran has a reputation as a hell-raising ladykiller. But he's also fiercely loyal. So when he's recruited by a new combat unit, Dallas is none too pleased to find himself teamed up with the icy blond JAG officer who nearly court-martialed his friends.
 
Academy graduate Julianne Decatur is tough, tenacious, and driven by her belief in military law. She has zero patience for hot shot Spec-Ops cowboys who think the rules don't apply to them, and even less tolerance for Dallas' tough-as-nails Texas attitude.
 
But when they're assigned to investigate a Navy flyer's apparent suicide, they discover the trail of a ruthless killer with a secret to hide—and an attraction between them that can't be denied. And when their prey turns the tables on them, Julianne will have to depend on the one man daring and reckless enough to keep them both alive.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 9, 2006
      Veteran counterterrorism official Clarke, author of Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror
      and the novel The Scorpion's Gate
      , proves once again that authenticity, insider information and top-secret access artfully applied trumps fancy writing with this cutting-edge, nail-biter techno-thriller set in 2012. Clarke's intriguing plot centers on the development of Living Software, a massive computer program designed to travel throughout the Internet correcting computer errors and creating software without any help or oversight from human beings. Volunteers would be connected to this program in a project aimed at reverse engineering the human brain. Added to this fascinating mix is the Transhumanist movement, whose labs grow designer children with extra chromosomes. Mysterious entities who would deny this progress are blowing up government Internet connections, killing scientists and destroying the labs participating in this research. Savvy readers will ignore the evidence that points to the obvious suspect, but still be surprised at the identity of the perpetrator when all is revealed.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2006
      Controversial former national security advisor Clarke has written an intriguing but flawed second novel (after "The Scorpion's Gate") with a very timely premise that focuses on the vulnerability of the global computer networks on which we all depend for our information, our security, and, in many cases, our livelihoods. When attacks on our computer systems threaten the security of the United States, massive efforts are launched to find the enemy. Is it a foreign power? Terrorists? Or people opposed to the perceived godlessness of computer technology? Sadly, an exciting plot idea descends into a morass of computer tech-speak and mumbo-jumbo that bogs down the story and results in a confusing and overly complex tale. Moreover, the major characters are poorly developed. The result is a thriller that isn't very thrilling. For larger collections. [See Prepub Alert, "LJ" 9/1/06.]Robert Conroy, Warren, MI

      Copyright 2006 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      October 1, 2006
      In the year 2012, a clandestine team is sent to investigate the sabotage of U.S. cyberspace connections in remote outposts. The team: Susan Connor, a Harvard graduate and national security agent; Jimmy Foley, an NYPD detective; and Soxster, a wiseass computer hacker. Within days, terrorists destroy technology targets, disconnecting the U.S. from Internet communications; robotic personal assistants jump out of windows after having downloaded their owners' personal information onto the Internet; and military technology turns against its users in a secret desert military installation. The escalating attacks on American technology heighten political tensions and pressure on the president to react--but against whom? As high-powered American and European figures learn that the "Global Village is held together by a very few, fragile strands," suspicion turns to the Chinese. Connor, Foley, and Soxster race to find the villain before the U.S. goes to war against China. Clarke's second novel employs a dizzying array of characters and locales, from Boston to Beijing to the Bahamas. In the author notes, Clarke, a former national security advisor to four presidents, recalls his first novel, " The Scor"pion's Gate (2005), a futuristic look at oil and geopolitics that was not meant to be predictive but turned out to presage recent developments in the Persian Gulf region. By contrast, Clarke declares this novel is "meant to be predictive" about technology and the promise--or threat--to human genetics. That assertion will boost interest in this fast-paced and fascinating novel.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2006, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 26, 2007
      In a techno-thriller as timely as today's exploding Internet, counterterrorism expert Clarke and veteran actor Dean team up for an exciting and truly frightening audio experience. There are no artful metaphors or other writer's flourishes in this story—just a major download of insider info, which obviously comes from the author's impressive sources. Set in 2012, Breakpoint
      tells about a computer program called Living Software, designed to surge across the Internet, invent new software and clean up past mistakes on its own, without any human help. There's also a group called the Transhumanist Movement, where children with extraordinary new chromosomes are being grown. But somebody (the Russians? A business rival of the Movement's sponsor?) is blowing up Internet connections, destroying labs and killing scientists in an apparent attempt to derail the project. Dean guides listeners calmly and logically through this murky tangle, finally reaching an ending that will surprise and enlighten as well as scare their socks off. Simultaneous release with the Putnam hardcover (Reviews, Oct. 9).

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