This was such a unique read! I was enthralled from start to finish, and it’s absolutely a journey I encourage you to go on as well!
About the Book
23 December 2024… Rob Tanner should have been enjoying a rare day off from his life-consuming work as Chief Operating Officer at one of the country’s largest banks. But a panicked phone call from a senior colleague forces him to put his Christmas plans on ice: more than a thousand of the bank’s accounts have seen their balances increased by a factor of ten. Exactly ten. Through the inexplicably simple addition of an extra zero. And when the inflated balances prove to be neither early Christmas gifts, nor a botched computer system upgrade, but the most sophisticated cyber attack in history, Tanner finds himself in the eye of a “Black Swan’ storm no one predicted, but anyone could have anticipated.
Tanner enlists the help of brilliant American cyber security expert Ashley Markham, but the attacks only worsen: bank balances rise remorselessly and spread to all the nation’s banks. The only clues to the hacker’s intentions are cryptic daily emails, centred on Hieronymus Bosch’s medieval representation of the seven deadly sins―and packed with colourful artistic and cultural references―taunting Tanner and the newly incumbent Prime Minister, James Allen.
With financial markets―and the very world as he knows it―on the brink of collapse, Tanner races against the clock to decode not just the bizarre emails but their deeper meaning, and the implications for who he can really trust. All the while, his former boss “The Toad” is seeking revenge… and answers of his own.
This enthralling, multi-layered debut follows the story of a disillusioned banker facing unthinkable financial Armageddon, where money has no value, stock and bond prices are meaningless, and the economy is destroyed. Can Tanner unravel the mystery of the hacker’s obsession with Bosch, sin and retribution before modern society returns to the dark ages?
Book description:
A multi-layered, race against time, cyber-crime thriller with a simple, original, “Black Swan’ premise that will keep you awake at night turning the pages… and questioning your dependence on modern technology.
An intriguing cyber-take on the locked room mystery; a whydunnit as well as a whodunnit, centred on the modern seven deadly sins.
Full of cryptic artistic and cultural references (or are they clues?).
A thought-provoking morality tale set in London at Christmas (via Europe, the US and Africa).
With short, sharp chapters and crisp dialogue from an ensemble cast… where the criminal may be the one person telling the truth.
And, at its heart, an everyday tale of love, loss and redemption.
My Thoughts
Even though I guessed pretty early on who the “bad guy” was, I still needed the verification, and the journey was still worth going on. Besides, there were still so many twists, turns, and adventures even after the big reveal. This one left me unsettled days after I turned the final page, longing for more information even though the book was 780 pages long.
It wasn’t that the author did a bad job of wrapping everything up; it was that the story was designed to leave you unsettled and questioning everything you know. He created a smashing ensemble of a cast. It was full of good, bad, and fifty shades of morally grey characters that were complex, beautifully developed, and so realistic. Despite my guess pretty early, he did a great job of creating red herrings and false leads throughout the story.
This epic-sized sci-fi book will haunt you with the possibilities it poses. The reality of what could happen if the scenario on the pages played out in real life is terrifying, and not a scary fantasy creature pops up on a single page. His work to show that man and his creation and reliance on made-up systems are the worst monsters of all is scarier than any fantasy horror story could ever be.
The real systemic, social commentary and lessons provided within sheer entertainment are the delight I find in sci-fi and fantasy, and this author has created a nearly 800-page masterpiece in this vein.
I’m so grateful for being included in this read-along by the author and LBT, and I can’t wait to see what happens next!
Who’s It For?
If you enjoy science fiction with strong social commentary, you will enjoy this story. The social commentary is evident without being heavy-handed. This is a long read, requiring dedication and some ability to follow sometimes complex scientific concepts, delving deep into the ideas of computing, AI, and more.
Content Warnings: Death, Body Shaming, Hostile Workplace Environment, Sexism, Sexual Assault, Suicidal Ideation, Abortion, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Loss, Rioting, Dystopian Conditions, Apocalyptic Events. This is not meant to serve as a complete list of subjects that individuals may find potentially bothersome.
About the Author
Simon Hayes is an award-winning former headhunter and investment banker. His finance career took him from his home city London, where he was a top-ranked securities analyst in the Institutional Investor and Extel surveys, to the US, Hong Kong and Japan. Search led Simon back to Tokyo, where he was recognised as the “Best Headhunting Executive” in Japan by Asiamoney, then as head of a leading London-based Financial Services practice into the City’s most exclusive boardrooms.
He wrote Zero Ri$k, his first novel, whilst creating the rubriqs® people skills system, and he spent much of 2023 in Zimbabwe on a major fraud case.. Born and raised in West London, Simon was the first member of his family to attend university, graduating from Trinity Hall, Cambridge with a degree in Law.
Links
Amazon US: https://a.co/d/20PZ7lu
Amazon UK: https://amzn.eu/d/bIOcypH
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/213171681-zero-ri-k
Published by Amorina Carlton. Award-winning American author, Amorina Carlton, is currently working on her first novel. You can find more about her published work and works in progress on the home page. She also serves as the PR/Marketing Lead for Ravens and Roses Publishing, and reviews books, mostly by other indie authors, here and on Bookstagram.