
Progress Report
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3 months free
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Narrated by:
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Adam Schulmerich
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By:
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Roman Lando
An alien artifact. An accidental discovery. A looming nuclear apocalypse.
Art is a computer geek and retro electronics aficionado who just wants to be left alone. When he stumbles upon an alien artifact, he can't help but try to find out its purpose. Instead, he finds himself in over his head, in the midst of what might just turn out to be the end of the world, and nobody except him knows the truth. A truth that certain factions don't want to get out—at any cost.
It's not paranoia when self-driving cars are out to get you. Can Art survive the hunt, and maybe save the world in the process?
Progress Report is a near-future technothriller for fans of Ready Player One, Daemon, and Bobiverse. It’s packed with action, humor, and a sense of the profound that will linger long after you've finished listening.
©2022 Roman Bershadsky (P)2023 Roman BershadskyListeners also enjoyed...




















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Mind blowing
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Highly recommended.
Reluctant hero. Wild adventure
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enjoyable story
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This book is so lovely!
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Enjoyable
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This is an interesting story, with some inconsistencies, and awkward dialog.
I enjoyed this book, quite a bit, despite it's shortfalls. The main character was relatable, secondary characters believable, good settings, good plot and pacing. It was a good time.
The main character was well developed and easy to identify with. He was a little over powered, but not so much so as to feel out of place, just a little cliche. The fact he is a a tech head, with all the right contacts, and also well versed in firearms and martial arts, is a bit much. I'm not saying there's not a lot of similar people in the world, but it just seems a bit far fetched how this all fell exactly into the right persons lap.
I loved that this was set in canada, but this also lead to some inconsistencies. Like the fact he got a hand gun, at one point, and his mind is solely on the "illegal" 10 round magazine in the rifle he has. He has no firearms license, and no permit for the handgun, meaning the rifle magazine would be the least of his worries.
There is also an American agent working in Canada. An international agent or Canadian CSIS officer, would have been a little more logical, but hey, I guess America has the police the whole world, so....
The dialog is also a little clunky. Now, the book is written as a diary or log of something that happened to the main character. The main character is writing it all down, incase he is not able to deliver the information. In that regards, it makes some sense that the dialog he recalls wouldn't bee the way people talk, especially as the narrator is trying to write semi formally, for record of the events. However, it is a little hard to read/listen to, as people don't generally speak to each other the way they do in the story.
The voice narrator, Adam Schulmerich, didn't help the dialog. He read the book a little like he was giving a speech. It matched the semi formal tone of the text, but it definitely added to the robot feel of the story. The narrator needs to add some voice differentiation between characters and add some female voices, and generally loosen up a little. Be more conversational.
All in all, this was a pretty good book. It falls into some cliche traps of overkilled protagonists, and "'Merica!!" the tone is a little too formal, leading to some robotic dialog, but the engagement of the story is more than enough to over power any of this.
This is definitely worth a read/listen to.
Definitely worth checking out even with some flaws
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