1.4 (Point 4, #2)

1.4 (Point 4 #2)

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3.84 of 5 stars 3.84  ·  rating details  ·  257 ratings  ·  87 reviews
Thousands of years in the future the divide between humanity and technology has become nearly unrecognizable. Each thought, each action is logged, coded, backed up. Data is as easily exchanged through the fiber-optic-like cables that extend from fingertips as it might be through ordinary conversation. It's a brave new world: A world that the Straker Tapes say is a result o...more
Kindle Edition, 367 pages
Published May 7th 2012 by Egmont
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Matt
Rating: 3.5

This series is actually relatively solid science fiction, me like.
Amy Sturgis
As the sequel to a young adult dystopian book I truly loved (Human.4), this novel had big shoes to fill. I had my doubts as the book opened, but I soon realized they were misplaced. This story delivers, absolutely.

Set a millenia after Human.4, 1.4 brilliantly folds the previous novel into its "mythos" while offering new characters and raising the stakes for their conflict. As the two young protagonists uncover the mysteries of the pending "upgrade" to humanity, and their parents' relationship to...more
The Cheap Reader
Okay, I’ll admit it. While I was extremely excited to read this book, I was pretty annoyed that it didn’t pick up right after book one. We pick up 1000+ years later. Uhh, that’s a long time. SO much has changed. I wanted to know what happened with Kyle and friends. WHAT HAPPENED?! After I started reading, I realized I was wrong and it’s so much better this way. We know what happened in book one. Even though we don’t know the specifics of what happened in the 1000+ years between the two books, we...more
Chris S.
The Future We Left Behind is definitely a worthy sequel to Human.4, and the repetitive plot didn't bother me in the least. I think it was used to illustrate the fact of the inevitability of the whole thing. Nevertheless, I would like to see a break in the plot by book three, which will probably be about a certain diary mentioned in this book.

What I liked was the symbolism, as I thought the "Greatorex" surname mentioned might mean "greater Rex, i.e., the greater king. Also, "del Rey" means "of h...more
Jen Blackham
This book really shouldn't be by Mike A Lancaster, because wasn't he the "editor" of the book "Human.4" ... and that was written 1000 years before this one. Explain that! Maybe it's his great, great, great ... grandson by the same name. *Ü* Unlike the first book, the editor(author) doesn't talk to the reader, although the text is diary entries, which is similar to the format of the transcribed tapes in Human.4.

While this could be considered a sequel, the first book in the series doesn't just lea...more
Faith (Student Spyglass)
Review also published on my blog StudentSpyglass

Source: Review copy from NetGalley

Plot: ★★★★★
Characters: ★★★★
Readability: ★★★★★
Overall: ★★★★


1.4 follows 1000 years after the events of 0.4, when the Straker tapes were recorded. Dominated by The Link, which functions inside people’s heads to connect them, get news and change outfits, this world scoffs at the Straker tapes; considering them a myth. We follow Peter, the son of a famous anti-Straker scientist, and Alpha, the new girl at college who tu...more
Ruhama
Peter Vincent's life takes a drastic turn when he signs up for a literature course (instead of another science course) for the new semester. His father, who created the artificial bee that saved the world, would never approve. But Peter is enjoying the assigned reading and has found his usual ways of thinking challenged. Then he meets Alpha, who challenges his thinking even further: she's a Strakerite. This is a group of people much like a Luddite--a fringe group that believes technology only ha...more
Dark Faerie Tales
Review courtesy of Dark Faerie Tales

Quick & Dirty: Lancaster shows us that technology isn’t all that its cracked up to be.

Opening Sentence: The story of Peter Vincent might easily have never been heard.

Review:

Technology plays an integral part of our lives. In The Future We Left Behind, the follow up book to Mike A. Lancaster’s Human.4, Lancaster takes us on a futuristic look at the differences between humanity and technology. I was really excited when I received this book. I love it when the...more
Blake
Overall, a pretty solid YA SF novel. I loved how the first novel in the series was incorporated into the mythos of this one, and how it was allegorical without being PURELY allegorical. It says things about humanity, about the internet, about faith, about destiny - and it throws all that we know into question.
Okay, so the premise is obviously fictional, but the deep question of "What makes us human?" is what I'm talking about. We tend to focus on the good things: compassion, kindness, capacity f...more
Jade Clements
Nov 25, 2012 Jade Clements rated it 4 of 5 stars Recommends it for: sci-fi lovers
Recommended to Jade by: I liked the first book

The Straker Tapes were recorded nearly a thousand years ago and although the record has survived, although there are those who believe in these events with increasing numbers, the sad truth is that this is nothing more then a hoax, a dream with no scientific proof to back up these claims. This is what Peter Vincent believes because it is what his father has taught him to believe. But what if everything he believed was a lie?

The Link has existed for as long as anyone can remember. It connects us...more
Mickey
The Future We Left Behind, or 1.4, by Mike Lancaster. I just found out that this book is a sequel. I had no idea! I was reading and reading, worrying to myself that I knew the end was coming and I my dread was growing. I didn't want it to end. Since I had not read the first book, I was dropped into a world like outs with obvious differences, but had no idea why everyone was treating the major changes as normal. The biggest being these filament things that let people network with each other - the...more
Larissa
The Straker Tapes were recorded nearly a thousand years ago and although the record has survived, although there are those who believe in these events with increasing numbers, the sad truth is that this is nothing more then a hoax, a dream with no scientific proof to back up these claims. This is what Peter Vincent believes because it is what his father has taught him to believe. But what if everything he believed was a lie?

The Link has existed for as long as anyone can remember. It connects us...more
Stephanie
Falls just short of a 4, but I'm rounding up.

This review originally appeared at www.readinasinglesitting.com.


“I am the boy running around trying to tell the world that the sky is falling. And you know what? It’s not an acorn this time. The sky really is falling in.”
Peter Vincent’s father is a world-renowned scientist, the man responsible for engineering a species of mechanical bees to replace the dwindling originals. It’s an act that’s a triumph of technology over nature, and a similar attitude...more
Anne
Moving on to the second book in the series; 1.4 was published at the beginning of this month by Egmont and we find ourselves transported many many years into the future yet again. I'm not sure exactly how many years have passed, but it's definitely hundreds and quite possibly thousands. Earth has changed dramatically, life is led via The Link which is accessed in people's head. A little like our internet but without the need for the hardware, just log into your Link account (in your brain) and c...more
Claire
Eh...

Didn't realize that it was the second book in the series. Wish I could've started with the first.

And may I say, kudos to you, Mike Lancaster. You've written one heck of a book--my head is still struggling to wrap around all the plot twists.

Basically, we're now an upgraded society. We have something called the Link, and it's every sci-fi writer's dream--we're all connected electronically, we have little wire/cable thingys to communicate and stuff, and you have to read the book to fully get i...more
Leo  E-M
The Straker Tapes were recorded many years ago and although the records have survived there are those who believe that these events/myths are hoaxes, dreams with no scientific proof to back up these claims.
The Link has existed for as long as anyone can remember. It connects us all to each other with little more than a thought, it stores our memories, records our thoughts our life contains it defines who we are and the world we live in. But the Link is not limitless and not unable to be hacked. M...more
Nadine
In book 1 (0.4) the events leading to an "upgrade" of the human race were recorded by a boy called Kyle Staker. Centuries later only few believe those records are more than a legend, they call themselves Slakerites and try to live the way people lived before the upgrade, using as little technology as possible.
Peter Vincent is the son of one of the most famous scientists, he is struggling to inform his father about his decision to concentrate on literature as well instead of just science as his f...more
Kimberly
I didn't know this book was the second in a series so my initial impression was that everything could have been built upon more and the characters could have been more developed. Now, after knowing that there was a first book, I still feel the same way. The plot felt rushed through most of the book. Also, because the characters were so transparent, I never really connected with either of them. Because I didn't feel connected to the characters, I didn't really care what happened to them. I mostly...more
Harrison Fowler
The problem I have with reviewing books I give 100% is that I don't have much to say.

I'd say 1.4, the sequel to the amazing 0.4, is much different. It's almost a stand-alone, except for references and plot points you need to know from its predecessor. 1.4 has a great attention to detail, and a much grander scope than 0.4, not meaning better, just meaning it has a different goal in mind. While all those hings are great, its characters are lacking. The protagonist, Peter Vincent, is a very normal...more
sh(e)reader
The first book in this series left me with SO many unexplained questions, and I can't say that this really cleared anything up, but it was a good read. This isn't so much a sequel, it doesn't pick up where the last book left off, in fact the first book IS a book referred to by the characters in this one, like they have read it, just as we have. It's on the required reading list for the literature class in fact :)

In some of the other reviews, people note they didn't even realize (or realise, as i...more
Deborah
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Sharon Looby
I personally did not care for this book. For those that love to read futuristic -techy books - this will fit their bill. I found it to far fetched (but then again, I am not into that sort of stuff). Without reading Human.4, (as this book is the sequel to it) I found some parts of it confusing. In summary of the book - Peter Vincinet lives in a society where everything they need is taken care of through "The Link". It is controlled by the goverment and helps control the enviroment and everything...more
Tina
This book was between 3.5 and 4 stars, but since I really liked the futuristic idea and approach overall I decided on 4 stars.

I wish it would have picked off where 0.4 ended, and this would have been the 3rd novel of a trilogy instead of the book after 0.4.
I just was left really interested in Kyle and the other ones "left behind" in 0.4 and how their life would be after the upgrade that I would have preferred to read about that first and then about a civilization so far in the future as this sto...more
Ariel Cummins
There isn't a whole lot of pure sci-fi in YA today, which is why I think this book really shines. It's got a really interesting premise that builds on Human.4 in a pretty unique way. The characters were, in general, pretty well formed, and I think Peter's world was hinted in ways that made it feel rich and full without having too much exposition or explanation.

I will definitely be checking out further books in this series, although I'm curious to see where the author could take it from here.

Defi...more
Elicia (Girl in the Woods Reviews)
You can also find this review at http://girlinthewoodsreviews.blogspot... in the review archive.

Detailed Review: This book has so many surprises! Honestly that just managed to blow my head off a few times!

I didn't get to read the first book in the series but this book itself also works as a standalone.

Would you want to know how it feels like when your memories are tampered by an unknown person? Because this is what happens to the people in the book, including the main character, Peter. What if...more
Simcha Lazarus
Imagine that you are a kid living at home (unless you are a kid living at home, in which case just go with it) and your parents tell you to get in the car because they have somewhere special to take you. The last time your parents sprang a surprise trip on you, you ended up at the amusement park so you're really excited. You get in the car and your father (let's assume he's at the wheel) starts driving.

He drives and drives and you notice that you have passed-by the turnoff to the amusement park,...more
Skyla
Find this and more over at the blog:
http://happygolucky-skyla.blogspot.com/


One Point Four picks up the premise started in Zero Point Four many years after Kyle and his friends were “erased” from existence.

An entire religion, for lack of a better word, has been created based on the possibility of these non-upgraded humans existing side by side to the rest of the population. These non-upgraded humans can see you and are possibly immortal beings, but you can’t see them because you have forgotten...more
Meganm922
I received a copy of this book from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

When I requested to review this book, I had no idea it was the second book in the series. Because I was still interested in reading it and wanted to get it read as promptly as possible, I did a little bit of research on what book 1 was about and how book 2 was. It’s the kind of sequel that involves completely different characters, so I felt confident about picking it up without reading the first one.

I loved this book...more
Cindy Gu
I liked this a lot more than Human.4. I thought that society in this book was a lot more interesting than the previous, which was just stuff we've heard/seen before. Also, i found the narrator a lot better than Kyle Straker or w/e his name was.

We also get to know more about his little female side-kick, who's like Lilly of the previous book. Her name's Alpha, and she's so keen and kind, i loved her. The chemistry between Peter and her was more anticipated and cute than Kyle and Lilly.

We also get...more
ConvincoDude
Somehow even more satisfying than Human.4, this book is guaranteed to keep your attention right down to the final moments. Even though it's a very distant sequel, it still feels very closely connected to its predecessor, mostly because of the presence of Strakerists who are ostracized for their beliefs. This book doesn't seem to want to end, and I didn't want to end this one either, but alas all good things must come to an end, as we all know.
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The Future We Left Behind (Point 4, #2)
The Future We Left Behind (Point 4, #2)
1.4 (Point 4, #2)
Human.4 (Point 4, #1)

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“There's actually no point in following in another's footsteps TOO exactly, you'll end up leaving no tracks of your own.” 3 people liked it
“She was only saying what I already knew in my heart, but hearing the words spoken made it seem all the more true, all the more terrifying.

Words gave concepts power.

Once they were released, there was no choice but to understand them, no matter how painful they might be.”
1 person liked it
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