
Reap3r
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3 months free
Buy for $19.95
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Narrated by:
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Eliot Peper
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By:
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Eliot Peper
How far would you go to achieve your greatest ambition?
Nothing is what it seems in this speculative thriller about a quantum computer scientist, virologist, podcaster, venture capitalist, and assassin coming together to untangle a twisted enigma that will change the course of future history. Everyone has something to hide, and every transgression is a portal to discovery.
Taking you on a whirlwind journey from the heart of the San Francisco Bay Area to the distant shores of the Galápagos, Reap3r is a propulsive adventure that grapples with the price of progress and how technology shapes our lives and world.
©2022 Eliot Peper (P)2022 Eliot PeperListeners also enjoyed...




















Listener received this title free
I remember reading an interview (or a post) from Peper where he said (paraphrasing) that he would look into what certain niche groups were researching or looking into and make that niche group or product a real thing – then write about what would happen if it did. This feels similar here, I haven’t read anything that feels like Reap3r but that doesn’t mean it’s not based on true research or true products that people are building towards.
Reap3r was probably the most thriller of Peper’s technothrillers – allowing the reader to go along for a ride as things kept getting worse and worse. It really felt like there was no way that certain people were going to get out of this with their lives and/or their dignity. But every time I thought the book was over or there was no way things would get better – something would change.
I’ve been reading Peper for years now, starting with his Uncommon Stock series and each one of them blows me away for different reasons. I know that I’m going into it and learning about technology in a way I never expected. Peper is able to write tales that scare the technology out of me and make me pay better attention to what’s going on in the tech world.
It wouldn’t be an audiobook review if I didn’t talk about the narrator. Now, Peper undertook the overwhelming task of narrating his own book. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t a little nervous. Being friends with narrators with 100+ books under their belt – I know that getting started is really hard and it’s something that isn’t for the faint of heart. But, I can tell that Peper took this seriously – he seems to have worked with a mentor/teacher to learn the skill and then partnered up with a producer so that it sounds great. And honestly, I couldn’t tell that this was Peper’s first narration. He was able to provide a great story AND great storytelling ability to write us Reap3r, then perform it.
Another Fantastic Technothriller
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Captivating, thought provoking, and beautiful
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compelling weave of plots and thoughts
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well worked story with characters that really come alive as they navigate a complex web of intrigue. I've enjoyed many of Eliot's stories and this was one of his best.
great example of speculative fiction, setting the story in a near future where technology, climate change, entrepreneurism, and ethics all colide. clearly well researched. also, really enjoyed the narration, which the author himself preformed!
i finished this audiobook in 3 days, so yeah, i would definitely recommend this book
speculative fiction at it's finest!
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Thrilling Near Futuristic Quick Read
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probably good
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Eliot does it again by doing a great job of keeping the book relevant enough in today’s world in both technology, political, and environmental issues that help make a near future book seems believable and real. With out spoiling too much some of the things he brings up in the book is crazy to think he wrote those parts more than 2 years before publishing and some of the ideas and thoughts he put in the book came true 😳. I think that is why I love his books so much. No matter how fast-paced or near future he makes the books they don’t feel that far out on the horizon of technology and the issues seem like they might be something we will need to address in our lifetime.
The story has many key characters that each have their own stories and at the start, you keep trying to figure out how everything is going to fit together. That is where the magic of his writing takes place as he weaves each of the characters' stories together. There are past friendships / acquaintances with secrets to hide which is how they ended up where they are today. Then there are newer characters that have created something amazing and are now being thrust into the mix and trying to put all the pieces together.
Not to mention Eliot’s attention to detail throughout the book I always appreciate as I can picture the places he is talking about and it makes me feel like I am there seeing the sights and sounds. Also, how can I forget if you have read some or all of Eliot’s books you might find some tie-ins or mentions of technology, and/or people from his previous works 😉.
Awesome book you can’t go wrong with picking it up today!
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Great Story
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The book is read by the author who is a podcaster - he reads well but doesn't "perform" the book like a professional narrator.
I felt there was too much virtue signaling (more left than Bill Maher), shallow character depth, and a slow pace.
For reference - to see if you are a listener like me, I love the following authors and read/listen to everything they come out with:
Brandon Sanderson, John Scalzi, Michael J. Sullivan, Craig Alanson, Dennis E. Taylor, Daniel Suarez, Joshua Dalzelle, Marko Kloos, Eric Ugland, B.V. Larson, Shirtaloon, Neal Stephenson, Will Wight, Andy Weir...
Virtue signaling, lack of character depth
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near future scifi...
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