Paramètres
- 336pages
- 12 heures de lecture
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Silicon Valley: home of online start-ups, couture coffee, sexual meditation, and the future. In its midst, Neill Bassett is helping to build the world's first artificial intelligence - a computer that talks, thinks, lies and, if all goes to plan, feels bad about it too. But when the experiment swerves in an unexpected direction, Neill is forced to confront a few buried feelings of his own - for his ex-wife, for his dead father, for his twenty-first-century life and for a very twenty-first-century woman called Rachel, who might just hold the answer to it all . . . 'Electrifying, clever, funny and very entertaining.' The New York Times 'Worthy of Chuck Palahniuk . . . Hutchins's satirical take on 21st-century existence is sharply observed.' Independent 'Touching and extremely funny, Neill Bassett is a disenchanted bachelor for the Noughties generation. Brilliantly achieved.' GQ 'Mixes the everyman likeability of Nick Hornby with a splash of the offbeat intellect of Douglas Coupland.' Metro 'Inventive, intelligent, hilarious. One of the pleasures here is Hutchins' terrific grasp of the zeitgest.' San Francisco Chronicle
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A Working Theory of Love, Scott Hutchins
- Langue
- Année de publication
- 2014
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (souple)
Modes de paiement
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- Titre
- A Working Theory of Love
- Langue
- Anglais
- Auteurs
- Scott Hutchins
- Éditeur
- Penguin Books
- Publié
- 2014
- Format
- souple
- Pages
- 336
- ISBN10
- 0241962560
- ISBN13
- 9780241962565
- Séries
- Mots clés
- Fiction, Romans d'amour, Science-fiction, Littérature contemporaine, Amour, Romance contemporaine, Sexualité et intimité, Suicide, Dépression, Intelligence Artificielle, Sectes et cultes, Californie, San Francisco, Mélancolie, Silicon Valley
- Évaluation
- 3,2 sur 5
- Description
- Silicon Valley: home of online start-ups, couture coffee, sexual meditation, and the future. In its midst, Neill Bassett is helping to build the world's first artificial intelligence - a computer that talks, thinks, lies and, if all goes to plan, feels bad about it too. But when the experiment swerves in an unexpected direction, Neill is forced to confront a few buried feelings of his own - for his ex-wife, for his dead father, for his twenty-first-century life and for a very twenty-first-century woman called Rachel, who might just hold the answer to it all . . . 'Electrifying, clever, funny and very entertaining.' The New York Times 'Worthy of Chuck Palahniuk . . . Hutchins's satirical take on 21st-century existence is sharply observed.' Independent 'Touching and extremely funny, Neill Bassett is a disenchanted bachelor for the Noughties generation. Brilliantly achieved.' GQ 'Mixes the everyman likeability of Nick Hornby with a splash of the offbeat intellect of Douglas Coupland.' Metro 'Inventive, intelligent, hilarious. One of the pleasures here is Hutchins' terrific grasp of the zeitgest.' San Francisco Chronicle
