A near-future murder-mystery-drama morphs over 10 days into an action-packed sci-fi conspiracy-thriller as a historical Southern rural river community is suddenly overwhelmed by a series of accidents and deaths. Are all these events somehow tied to a dam break, the murder of an old riverman, and a fish? Can Sheriff Coleman of Charles County solve this puzzling case with the reluctant help of Jason Dickson, an autistic convicted-hacker/ engineering student? What discovery is so great they risk their lives, and everyone they love, to reveal to the world? Can you decipher the Master Code with Jason too?
Nominated for the 2023 Prometheus Award for Best Novel
T. A. Hunter grew up from a simple life as a farm boy who played in the woods, creek, fields, and farm pond to become an engineer, scientist, inventor, businessman, artist, poet, naturalist, and avid gardener. He is married and a proud father. Two of his childhood heroes were Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Edison.
One young man is trying to make up for his past. One company is trying to hide what it is doing. The mega-rich scientific facility vs the college kid with a checkered past. With the help of a small tight knit community and outdated technology, the town must figure out what is causing a bunch of deaths and why. The clock is ticking and they must try to stay off the facilities radar.
Pleasant read with grit. I enjoyed the way knowledge about a variety of industries and lifestyles was woven into the story without being over the top; won't say more or there will be spoilers. I found myself guessing what was really going on until the end.
I’m not quite sure how I feel on this book. I’d give it anywhere from two stars to four stars, so I landed on three. It’s a story about past, present, and future with religion and science all mixed in. You can tell the author either knows a lot about these subjects or did research as what’s talked about is very thorough. It’s almost too thorough for genuine conversations though. I kept getting the feeling of condescension when some of the characters talked and it put me off a little. I do agree with the storyline/premise of the book and like it, I just wish it was almost less articulate? If that makes sense.
This is a very odd book. Very scientific and very religious at the same time. Some of the dialog doesn't seem genuine. It is a battle of good (religious simplicity) vs evil (science/technology). I am not sure if I liked it or not. I got about 75% through the book and wasn't sure I wanted to finish reading it, there was so much death I was afraid the author was going to kill off every character I had come to like. I finished it and the author mostly wrapped up the story, but the ending was not satisfying to me. Feel free to read it and see if you like it though, it is an interesting read