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Silicon Override

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One thousand feet below the ocean, in the largest and most advanced research facility on Earth, something has gone terribly wrong…

Chase Edwards, a brilliant, reformed slacker, arrives at ArcSIS on the eve of the most ambitious experiment in human history -- His life finally back on track. At ArcSIS he’ll have access to cutting-edge technology, advanced resources, and the world’s most talented scientists and engineers – all of which meant to design, patent, and usher in the next stage in human evolution. It’s everything Chase needs to restart his once promising career.

But when the experiment results in disaster, Chase finds himself on the run from the transformed and terrifying reawakened bodies of the ArcSIS staff, all under the absolute control of a renegade AI – Node Zero.

Trapped a thousand feet below the surface of the ocean, completely cut off and isolated from the outside world – The catastrophe turns personal when Chase learns that Node Zero has a special connection to him – and it won’t stop until Chase is assimilated into its network… Or he’s exterminated.

Now Chase must survive long enough to uncover the dark secrets and true aims of ArcSIS, clinging to his fragile hope it will give him the means to stop Node Zero from escaping the facility and unleashing wholesale devastation upon the earth.

556 pages, Kindle Edition

Published April 16, 2021

24 people are currently reading
22 people want to read

About the author

Shawn Ketcherside

1 book1 follower
Shawn, an unabashed follower in nerdy pop culture - loves video games, books, anime, movies, comic books, toys, and television (where he holds a borderline unhealthy obsession with “The Office.”)

His fascination with video games early in his life, being fascinated with the cabinet art on an old coin-op arcade game. Then, when he was able to actually put eyes on the screen, the fascination blossomed to a full-on obsession – one that later expanded to comics, books, anime, TV, and movies.

From a young age, he knew he wanted to create and entertain. As an early teen, he discovered a passion and talent for writing – cultivated alongside skills in coding and design. These passions and skills, combined with an ill-advised degree in Psychology with secondary concentrations in English and Film (I mean, come’on… A computer science degree was right there!) culminated in a career path in Game Development.

Since getting his start in the game industry, Shawn has spent 2 decades developing games, where he’s worked as a programmer, designer, writer, and producer. In his time in the game industry, Shawn has worked in various roles on several amazing companies and several amazing titles, including Wordscapes, Super Lucky’s Tale, New Super Lucky’s Tale, Star Trek: Elite Force II, and Bioware’s epic story-driven RPG – Star Wars: The Old Republic.

Now, after years of helping to create worlds and stories for interactive gameplay, he’s turned his creative and narrative talents to novels and linear storytelling. His tense and action-packed debut novel – Silicon Override – released in early 2021, and his latest work is already in development.

As for how Shawn spends his time… Well, his passions and hobbies have not changed much since he was a child. He still loves movies, comics, books, movies and video games.

For games, he loves most anything, though he harbors a special love for retro titles. And while he’ll play MMOs, he seldom ventures into the competitive online space. Not because he dislikes the games, simply because he knows he’s utterly terrible and doesn’t wish to inflict his awfulness on any potential teammates, who’d invariably have to carry him to victory like a mewling, grumpy, toddler. Except, instead of being a cute baby, he’s just really bad at competitive games.
Seriously. He’s bad. Really terrible. Like, it’s shameful. Not kidding – this isn’t some self-deprecating author comment… He’s objectively awful.

When he’s not working, writing, playing games, procrastinating, or binge-watching TV. Shawn enjoys spending time with his family in their Texas home.

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5 stars
17 (43%)
4 stars
9 (23%)
3 stars
11 (28%)
2 stars
1 (2%)
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1 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Andrew Hindle.
Author 27 books52 followers
August 20, 2021
This action-packed techno thriller started in a fairly muted way, with a nice buildup of sympathetic and relatable characters (Chase and Abbey, and arguably Doctor Edwards who I immediately pictured as Sigourney Weaver and to be honest that was a difficult one to shake so I just went with it). Maybe a bit more of a hook is needed to pull the reader in. If you're going to have a Jurassic Park-style Hammond-video intro that the protagonist doesn't listen to, then make either the information in the video or the protagonist not listening to it the main point of the chapter. And if you go with the latter, the protagonist needs to do something else interesting, like eat a bunch of sunflower seeds and spit the husks all over the exposition-giver.

What am I talking about?

Well, Chase has a backstory and it's important to the narrative, but at the point we were just starting out I had to wonder why he had worked so desperately to get in on the ArcSIS project and was so desperate to work there (in 'app development', which ... okay I'll get to that), but then so aggressively refused to take part in viewing the introductory video, or any kind of preparation for the job, or the orientation even though he was being given a personal orientation tour and assistance by the female protagonist he was definitely kind of super into at first sight, or ... well, any of it. Just didn't make sense to me why Chase's motivations and actions were so unclear and he was going into ArcSIS with such a vague yet churlish yet super-keen yet meh attitude. That did fold kind of nicely into his ultimate fate and his lack of an emotional aura (I'll get to that too), though. So, okay.

Also, I'm afraid I completely missed what 'ArcSIS' stood for or meant. It's a cool name and stuff but I somehow managed to not see it expanded anywhere. I'm pretty sure that's on me, though.

ArcSIS is a little city under the sea, a technological wonderland isolated from the world. The potential of its construction and setup is unlimited. The things all the scientists who live there could be doing is very exciting. And the inclusion of all the necessary behind-the-scenes people (and making them into main characters) was really great the more I think about it. Those people are necessary, and often forgotten, and you can tell that Ketcherside gets that. It could have been ... okay, stay with me on this.

You know how, in Gremlins 2, there was this high-tech self-sustaining smart tower with a bunch of office grunts but then also a freaky lab run by Christopher Lee where they were doing, just, tons of weird shit? This was that, only it was also the ocean lab in Deep Blue Sea.

So, as tradition demands in such a setting, a bunch of gung-ho mercenaries go full Dennis Nedry on that shit and everything goes to Hell in a handbasket. Their appearance and interaction with Sigourney Weaver, and everything that happens with them, is weird but oddly readable nonsense. I had fun.

Should Chase have sat down at some point and explained clearly why he wanted to work in app development in this incredible sci-fi lab? Maybe. Should Doctor Edwards have explained why Chase needed to be reassigned to some kind of management role? Sure. Should Abbey ... okay, you know what? No notes on Abbey, she was great. Her weird superpower was perhaps somewhat surplus to requirements, but damn it, it was interesting.

I loved that, for a while there, it seemed like the day was going to be saved by the junior analyst grunt who was actually reading the boring data and double-checking figures and actually spotted a catastrophic problem. That was a cool little side / intro drama and definitely made me like Abbey way more than Chase.

I was less fond of the fact that, considering the fact that this was an undersea super-lab, very little of the story seemed to focus on the fact that they were under the ocean. I'm not saying there had to be a genetically engineered hyper-intelligent security octopus (although there objectively should have been), but the main point was that they had no easy way to get to the outside world or communicate with anyone, and that could have been done underground, or in space, or in Clamp Tower in the middle of New York City. The ocean needs to be a character in an undersea sci-fi setup.

As I was reading this story, I thought to myself that it definitely wouldn't be out of place in a lineup of TV shows and movies where there are intricately-set-up and dangerous settings, lots of dudes with guns, and a gross but unique zombie outbreak scenario. There are good examples and bad examples of such adaptations, but Sigourney Weaver would definitely have to carry any TV show or movie that got made out of this one. I'd still watch the shit out of it, though.

Sex-o-meter

The male and female protagonist have an immediate thing for each other and eventually share a tender kiss. The beefy head of security is doinking the male protagonist's mum off-page. I award Silicon Override one very small piano player and accompanying musical instrument out of a possible Carry On movie.

Gore-o-meter

The gore wins the day in this one, even if it wasn't too explicitly written. Lots of firefights and cold-blooded executions, tons of zombie violence. Four flesh-gobbets out of a possible five for Silicon Override.

WTF-o-meter

The phrases you're kidding / joking, and you can't be serious, were used just a little too regularly and at a certain point I started to get a funny surreal jolt every time a character said it. At no point in the story was shit not serious, so why anyone would be joking ... I know it's a figure of speech but it's - anyway. I also liked the fact that different people were using different terms - Trax, Initialized - instead of zombie. Which nobody seemed to even lampshade as a term they could be using (except one time, someone throws the z-word, but that's it). Also out of nowhere they decided the group noun for the zombies was pod, which was at least sort of aquatic even if it was the only thing that was. Adrian's increasingly cataclysmic inability to take responsibility for his own actions was hysterical. And the cyber-sphere and AI point of view stuff was fascinatingly imaginative. I'll give this a Lawnmower Man movie out of a possible Lawnmower Man Stephen King short story. That is, very close to one another in WTF terms, but on inspection nothing alike in any way.

My Final Verdict

When you decide to combine mundane-conflict office narratives, a mother-son drama, an undersea lab getting overthrown by mercenaries, a greedy multinational corporation with dark motives, a bunch of utopia-seeking scientists, a zombie outbreak with a nanocyte twist, a junior analyst who can see people's emotions and a lovable-nerd IT Guy plucky comic relief, that's definitely a choice. With so much going on, the result was at once page-turning and cacophonous. I've got to give Silicon Override two and a half stars, which I'll bump to three for the Amazon and Goodreads scale for the sake of the endearing banter between Chase and Rider.
Profile Image for Laurence Hibberd.
74 reviews
August 22, 2022
The book appears to be a tireless battle till the last page, and appears to be likely to continue judging by the evil glint in the dastardly protagonists eye. Little relief from this grinding warfare, but may appeal to computer needs (all respect).
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
190 reviews4 followers
May 14, 2023
Mad Science

I really liked the book, the science and techie stuff went right over my head, what it do was create an exciting well written story that kept me reading and entertained, I would read another book by the author.
Profile Image for Ken Cieszykowski.
6 reviews1 follower
November 17, 2023
Good story, too long in the telling

Book as about 140 pages too long. Author tries to exhibit his vast knowledge of nano science and data manipulation. Also somewhat unbelievable endurance of the survivors given the power of the initialized beings.
100 reviews1 follower
June 26, 2021
Weird reading

I liked the first part of the book but became redundant after that. I guess I just do not like this type of reading.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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