Zeroes A Novel Chuck Wendig Books
Download As PDF : Zeroes A Novel Chuck Wendig Books
Zeroes A Novel Chuck Wendig Books
I'm torn on this one, because on one hand it's a really good little thriller that keeps you turning pages until the end. The characters are Herr Wendig's usual broken people doing bad things for somewhat decent reasons vs really horrible people doing horrible things for horrible reasons (in this case the NSA, who sometimes reach cartoon levels of villainy for government lifers), so don't expect any punches pulled. The action sequences are good, the horror sequences are brutal, the writing is solid, no complaints there.But on the other hand, if you're a network or infosec expect who gets hung up on details, you're in for a rough time. There's a cell phone with built-in USB cable that can telnet into random servers. There's Ivo Shandor, the man responsible for every hack that's been in the news for the past five years (meaning the ones where the actual guys are known and named). There's hacks getting done in a day against high-security systems from stock Ubuntu workstations, lighting systems getting hacked, Linux permissions on Windows boxes, and... well, I won't get into the villain, but I only avoided snapping my credulity by assuming all this takes place in the Blue Blazes universe and that some degree of magic was involved. Not as bad as, say, Scorpion, but jarring to notice.
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Zeroes A Novel Chuck Wendig Books Reviews
It is actually quite rare to watch a movie or television show get the portrayal of hackers right. They are often shown typing away in seeming random on a DOS screen and instantly creating worms and viruses with just a few simple keystrokes. Or they are breaking into international banks and government systems with ease. I suppose if they showed that it was actually a tedious task it would not look good on screen .
Chuck Wendig's Zeroes seems to strike a good middle ground. It approaches hacking more realistically and not just the breaking onto security systems, but stealing credit cards, trolling, and just plain old research.
Zeroes (or Zer0es) is a deceptive novel. It starts off rather innocuous enough. We are introduced chapter by chapter to a cast of misfit hackers, and internet trolls. The opening of the book rounds up our cast of five characters as government forces arrest them one by one. They are each offered a deal, work for the government or go up the river. To some of them, it would also mean hurting loved ones or putting them in danger as one has been helping with the Arab Spring.
What follows would normally play out as a dirty dozen scenario. Do the job, stay out of jail. We get the interaction and banter between a group of individuals that really have no reason to like each other. There is a rivalry with another cell of hackers (really only one guy) at the same compound that they are held, called the Hunting Lodge. It ends up uniting them, actually.
A good percentage of the book, almost half of it, involves "pen tests," penetration tests into targets just to see how deep they can go. Their progress is monitored and logged and supposedly they are graded at how well they do at their probes. It will turn out that they were doing more hrm than they thuoght they were doing. I am remonded of Ender's Game where the simulations were not simulations.
Yet they are still basically in a prison and one that is not covered by any sort of penal regulations. So, of course, we have a motley crew of sadistic guards who are bored watching a bunch of loser nerds typing at computers and just want an excuse to toss someone into sensory deprivation tank for a day.
Halfway through the book, things hit the fan. It begins to occur that theses tests are not merely tests and bad things are beginning to happen around the world. At the core of it is an enigma that keeps popping up. Typhon. Who or what exactly is it? And just like that, what started off as a sort of techno-thriller, becomes a science fiction adventure with elements of horror to it.
There is enough action sequences for a Hollywood blockbuster and times it feels like this was written originally as a movie or even a big budget HBO or Netflix mini-series.
Wendig writes his does not introduce any particularly new science to the genre, and whatever complicated concepts there are, he explains everything without talking down to the audience or making info dumps.
But what really moves the book is its cast of characters. Each one of them has a personal history and a personality that comes though in the novel and we do root for our main cast even the Reagan, the internet troll. Wendig has a lot of experience with internet trolls if you follow him on Twitter, an he surprisingly, does not fully demonize her.
In the end, these five not particularly talented misfits have to combine their moderate skills to save the world. Really, they have to save the world.
The book does tease at sequel at the end that has yet to appear. Invasive which takes place in the same world is not a direct sequel. But what we get is a fun ride with a fun and motley cast of characters.
Recommended
ZerØes
A novel by Chuck Wendig
The Selector gathers them from across the country, cyber criminals all; a punk crusader, an obnoxious troll, a thief, a terrorist, a “whistle-blower“ of secrets. Threatened with lengthy prison sentences, they all agree to work for the government for a year. Isolated, tested, then thrown together as a “Pod” at a remote location, the “ZerØes,” as they now call themselves, are honed as a weapon. With that weapon, their keepers have them breach containment on diverse web sites that at first glance have no relationship to one another. But from those penetrations something sinister rises, something called “Typhon,” named after a many-eyed monster from Greek mythology. It is an AI with an ambition to rule the nation, if not the world. By using our obsessive drive toward interconnectivity, it is near omniscient. Murder on a large scale is but a tool to use in bringing those not part of Typhon’s collective to heel. And the only people with the knowledge to effectively fight it are the broken, strange and angry “ZerØes.”
"ZerØes" is a fine story, but it begins a trifle slow, and the characters are anything but warm and cuddly. They do grow on you as the story unfolds, and their motivations become clearer, but couldn't they have been made a bit more sympathetic initially? Additionally, by dividing the "hero" among so many characters focus and energy is lost until the last quarter of the story. And while it finishes with suspense and daring-do to spare it is nowhere near as enjoyable as other Chuck Wendig novels I could name.
Rating 3.5 Stars.
I'm torn on this one, because on one hand it's a really good little thriller that keeps you turning pages until the end. The characters are Herr Wendig's usual broken people doing bad things for somewhat decent reasons vs really horrible people doing horrible things for horrible reasons (in this case the NSA, who sometimes reach cartoon levels of villainy for government lifers), so don't expect any punches pulled. The action sequences are good, the horror sequences are brutal, the writing is solid, no complaints there.
But on the other hand, if you're a network or infosec expect who gets hung up on details, you're in for a rough time. There's a cell phone with built-in USB cable that can telnet into random servers. There's Ivo Shandor, the man responsible for every hack that's been in the news for the past five years (meaning the ones where the actual guys are known and named). There's hacks getting done in a day against high-security systems from stock Ubuntu workstations, lighting systems getting hacked, Linux permissions on Windows boxes, and... well, I won't get into the villain, but I only avoided snapping my credulity by assuming all this takes place in the Blue Blazes universe and that some degree of magic was involved. Not as bad as, say, Scorpion, but jarring to notice.
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