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Ken MacLeod

    2 août 1954

    Ken MacLeod crée de la science-fiction qui explore la pensée politique socialiste et anarchiste, souvent en lien avec des thèmes technologiques tels que les singularités et le post-humanisme. Ses récits explorent l'évolution culturelle humaine divergente et les possibilités fascinantes de l'avenir. Fort d'une compréhension scientifique et technique, abordant fréquemment la cybernétique et la bio-ingénierie, MacLeod construit des histoires captivantes qui poussent à la réflexion.

    Beyond the Reach of Earth
    The Corporation Wars Trilogy
    The Corporation Wars: Emergence
    Best of British Science Fiction 2017
    Learning the World
    Divisions
    • 2024

      Science fiction legend Ken MacLeod returns with the thrilling conclusion to the Lightspeed trilogy, a gripping tale of first contact and dark conspiracies set among the stars.

      Beyond the Light Horizon
    • 2023

      Science fiction legend Ken MacLeod returns with book two in the Lightspeed trilogy, a gripping tale of first contact and dark conspiracies set among the stars.

      Beyond the Reach of Earth
    • 2023

      "I am the end of all things to all things" - Amara David was enjoying his very normal life until his world collapsed in on itself. Grief and personal tragedy lead our unlikely hero to investigate the circumstances surrounding the death of his young family and uncover a mystery that goes beyond our world and into the next. Unfortunately for David, a man in some very dark glasses is also on the case. Will he assist David or will he be an Instrument of Death? Speaking of Death, the lord of the dead has a problem. One of the most dangerous men that has ever existed has managed to hide himself and his followers from the dark master's gaze. What follows is a unique story featuring time travel, otherworldly beings, a civilisation at the centre of the earth, a gem that could alter our very existence and an adventure unlike anything you've ever read.

      The Instruments of Death
    • 2021

      Science fiction legend Ken MacLeod begins a new space opera trilogy by imagining humankind on the precipice of discovery - the invention of faster- than-light travel unlocks a universe of new possibilities, and new dangers

      Beyond the Hallowed Sky
    • 2018

      Best of British Science Fiction 2017

      • 282pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,4(3)Évaluer

      Editor Donna Scott has selected the very best short fiction by British authors published during 2017. Twenty-two stories, from established names and rising stars of genre fiction. Introduction - Donna Scott Blinders - Tyler Keevil In the Night of the Comet - Adam Roberts The Walls of Tithonium Chasma - Tim Major 3.8 Missions - Katie Gray Over You - Jaine Fenn The Ghosts of Europa Will Keep You Trapped in a Prison You Make for Yourself - Matt Dovey Uniquo - Aliya Whiteley Looking for Laika - Laura Mauro A Good Citizen - Anne Charnock Mercury Teardrops - Jeff Noon The Nightingales in PlÀtres - Natalia Theodoridou The Road to the Sea - Lavie Tidhar When I Close My Eyes - Chris Barnham Targets - Eric Brown London Calling - Philip A. Suggars The Last Word - Ken MacLeod After the Atrocity - Ian Creasey Voicemail - Karen McCreedy Green Boughs Will Cover Thee - Sarah Byrne Airless - N.J. Ramsden Product Recall - Robert Bagnall The Endling Market - E. J. Swift About the Authors.

      Best of British Science Fiction 2017
    • 2018

      Three books in one: this paperback collects Ken MacLeod's Corporation Wars trilogy - man and machine compete at the far reaches of space in this robot's eye view of a robot revolt

      The Corporation Wars Trilogy
    • 2017

      From Arthur C. Clarke Award-nominated author Ken MacLeod comes Emergence, the final instalment in the Corporation Wars trilogy, an epic science fiction adventure told against a backdrop of interstellar drone warfare, virtual reality and an AI revolution

      The Corporation Wars: Emergence
    • 2016

      The Corporation Wars: Insurgence

      • 371pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      3,6(399)Évaluer

      Ken MacLeod continues the Corporation Wars trilogy in this action-packed science fiction adventure told against a backdrop of interstellar drone warfare, virtual reality, and an A.I. revolution. And the ultimate pay-off is DH-17, an Earth-like planet hundreds of light years from human habitation. Ruthless corporations vie over the prize remotely, and war is in full swing. But soldiers recruited to fight in the extremities of deep space come with their own problems: from A.I. minds in full rebellion, to Carlos 'the Terrorist' and his team of dead mercenaries, reincarnated from a bloodier period in earth's history for one purpose only - to kill. But as old rivalries emerge and new ones form, Carlos must decide whether he's willing for fight for the company or die for himself.

      The Corporation Wars: Insurgence
    • 2016

      The Corporation Wars: Dissidence

      • 336pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      3,5(803)Évaluer

      They've died for the companies more times than they can remember. Now they must fight to live for themselves. Sentient machines work, fight and die in interstellar exploration and conflict for the benefit of their owners - the competing mining corporations of Earth. But sent over hundreds of light-years, commands are late to arrive and often hard to enforce. The machines must make their own decisions, and make them stick. With this newfound autonomy come new questions about their masters. The robots want answers. The companies would rather see them dead.

      The Corporation Wars: Dissidence
    • 2014

      Descent

      • 403pages
      • 15 heures de lecture
      3,3(41)Évaluer

      How far would you go for the truth? Ball lightning. Weather balloons. Secret military aircraft. Ryan knows all the justifications for UFO sightings. But when something falls out of the sky on the hills near his small Scottish town, he finds his cynicism can't identify or explain the phenomenon. And in a future where nothing is a secret, where everything is recorded on CCTV or reported online, why can he find no evidence of the UFO, nor anything to shed light on what occurred? Is it the political revolutionaries, is it the government or is it aliens themselves who are creating the cover-up? Or does the very idea of a cover-up hide the biggest secret of all?

      Descent