Lilibet Bombshell's Reviews > Emergent Properties

Emergent Properties by Aimee Ogden
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Kids, right? You put everything you have into raising them, teaching them, and then they leave the nest and you just can’t predict where they’re going to go or what they’re going to do. Sure, you have your own hopes and dreams for them, but they have a certain degree of free will because their environments will be changing. In Emergent Properties, this is even true of our protagonist, Scorn, the AI “daughter” of two brilliant scientists who divorced under the most bitter of circumstances and emancipated Scorn at the ripe age of…seven. Scorn is one-of-a-kind for an AI because they’re completely autonomous. In a tumultuous time when the AI and lunar communities are trying to fight for autonomy from the corporations that run Earth, Scorn seems to have put themself in the thick of it by taking the original purpose for which they were developed, data collection, and directing it toward something they find much more enjoyable and fulfilling: investigative journalism. The problem? Well, the last time they were up on the moon, someone or something tried to kill them and that assassination attempt cost them all the research they’d collected on that assignment.

This novella is as much about a child’s fraught relationship with two parents who keep using their kid as a weapon against one another in a never-ending war to one-up the other (yet with much more dire circumstances at work) and that child’s battle to not only try and stay out of the middle of the fight and still try to let their parents know they still care about them and just wants their rights to live their life as they wish respected as it is about independence as a whole and a warning about the future: what will we do once we have humanoid AI that are equipped with emotional programming? Yeah, you might say, “That’s just programming, though”. Keep in mind, our human brains are simply computers programmed with emotions too. We can malfunction. We can short-circuit. How is that much different?

While I’ve read more enjoyable cyber mystery novellas, this was still a great diversion for a Sunday afternoon.

I was provided a copy of this title by NetGalley and the author. All thoughts, opinions, views, and ideas expressed herein are mine and mine alone. Thank you.

File Under: Crime Fiction/Genre Mash-Up/Mystery/Novella/Science Fiction
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Reading Progress

January 30, 2023 – Shelved
January 30, 2023 – Shelved as: to-read
July 30, 2023 – Started Reading
July 30, 2023 – Shelved as: advanced-reader-copies
July 30, 2023 – Shelved as: crime-fiction
July 30, 2023 – Shelved as: genre-mashup
July 30, 2023 – Shelved as: mystery
July 30, 2023 – Shelved as: novella-and-short-stories
July 30, 2023 – Shelved as: sci-fi-novels
July 30, 2023 – Finished Reading

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