Preview
  • Day After Infinity

  • By: J.F. Lawrence
  • Narrated by: Brian Avers
  • Length: 12 hrs and 50 mins
  • 4.2 out of 5 stars (15 ratings)

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Day After Infinity

By: J.F. Lawrence
Narrated by: Brian Avers
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Publisher's summary

Day After Infinity appeals to those who enjoyed We Are Legion, We Are Bob and Expeditionary Force.

In an age when technology vanquished natural death, Ryan and his sardonic AI implant are recruited at the last minute to board the first colony ship to Tau Ceti. As the lowest-ranked crewmember, he expects to cryogenically freeze right away, but the captain has other plans. Ryan begins a training program for rare individuals who heal much faster than normal, a program that teaches him to survive every possible scenario that Murphy’s Law can deliver.

Murphy delivers big time.

©2022 J.F. Lawrence (P)2022 J.F. Lawrence
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What listeners say about Day After Infinity

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Listener received this title free

Interesting story.

Very interesting story! Really challenged thinking about what is self. Will definitely look for more from this author.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
Listener received this title free

Welcome to the Ryanverse

By the author’s own admission, this story was inspired by Taylor’s Bobiverse series … in fact, it was perhaps too derivative to stand on its own merits. Instead of a human consciousness downloaded into a virtual environment … the author keeps the meat sack and adds a rather irritating AI whose sarcastic humor was generally hit or miss for me. Add in a few nanites and the ability to clone so that you can ignore the inherent human frailties and you are ready to pilot your very own von Neumann probe that gives us our very own Theseus Boat debate … which seems silly when you consider how often cells replicate and die within the human body.

Regardless, the story opens in a quasi-dystopian future after an apocalyptic AI war where the MC (Ryan) basically sells himself to one of three (3) interstellar colony projects headed to Tau Ceti. Apparently, as a result of his previous stint as a medical experimental subject perfecting the cryofreeze tech, his nanites (controlled by his secondhand AI riding shotgun in his head) are super effective in regenerating damaged tissue (aka regeneration factor), making him a near perfect candidate to be a “failsafe” or backup crew member, despite his lowly status, young age and humble beginnings (because picking on the underdog is a tried and true method of building an empathic connection to the MC). What follows is a virtual torture fantasy i(aka training simulations) that is primary designed to show how tough Ryan is (and slowly “upgrade” his human parts until he becomes the Borg and foreshadow his future) making the first half a very slow start.

We come back to the Bobiverse plot in the second half and Murphy makes sure Ryan must pick up his role as a failsafe … and some of the science inconsistencies become more obvious … but as the action ramps if it is also easier to ignore them. This is also where we reintroduce the bad guy … a rogue/insane AI (come on … you had to see this coming right? ref the Ai war and the Bobiverse? There are a few interesting twists as the story follows what by now should be a fairly predictable plot so it was the narration that actually kept it entertaining (and where the frat boy AI … called AL … calmed down enough to be less aggravating). Of course … the emotional drama ramps up as well in order to make the finale pull on heartstrings … and hide the plot holes that would otherwise had be large enough to drive a truck through. For those who miss the Bobiverse, this is a fun diversion.

I was given this free advance review/listener copy (ARC) audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review.

#DayAfterInfinity #FreeAudiobookCodes #KindleUnlimited

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Great premise but...

The narrator is great the premise has so much promise but for me the story was ruined by main characters namby-pamby attitude.

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Emotional Rollercoaster

This one is a rough one. The book is chock full of self sacrifice, isolation, and losing your humanity. Treating your body as a ship of theseus paradox. Main character is flawed and weak but the book doesn't go so far as to make him to annoying. His A.I. skirts the line of being annoying but enough of his jokes landed for me to give him a pass. Over all I enjoyed it and the ending made me cry. Would recommend.

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2 people found this helpful