What's the Name of That Book??? discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
► UNSOLVED: One specific book
>
Science fiction with a one word title
date
newest »

It is mandatory to include genre and plot details in your topic header, as per the Group Rules.
Because this group is so huge, we will close threads that don't adhere to this requirement.
Please add more plot details to your topic header from what you've already written.
Because this group is so huge, we will close threads that don't adhere to this requirement.
Please add more plot details to your topic header from what you've already written.
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Anyway, the book is set in a future where everyone is interconnected by mental link of some kind, so everyone communicates through images sent directly from each other's minds.
The main character is sent to a base on Saturns' moon Titan (searched this as well and couldn't find the book so I may be misremembering which planet/moon it is).
Due to the location being so far from earth, there is no signal for the neural network, and the main character discovers the scientists* on the station are happy about this, and are essentially against the network and believe it's evil in some way.
The main character is suspicious of this, as they are still sort of attached to the network. The book establishes that the network has become somewhat of a crutch for humans and that's why the scientists are against it I think.
Fairly sure it had a one word title, was written in the 2000s, the network was wireless and it had nothing to do with any evil or schemes. It was more of a dystopian novel. I remember the opening of the book had the character on earth, before going to titan* (might not be) to possibly fill a vacant position.
I must have read this between 2010-2015
Anyway, that's all I can remember about it. I've been looking on and off for it over the last couple years with no luck, any help would be deeply appreciated 👍
Edit: fairly sure the book was first person, and was not part of a larger series