: Quantum Ethics: A Thriller

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Author name: Keith Ellis

 : Quantum Ethics: A Thriller
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Type of bind: Kindle Edition
Format: Kindle Book
Label: Thunder Press
Manufacturer: Thunder Press
Printing Date: July 26, 2008
Publishing house: Thunder Press
Sale Popularity Level: 20838
Studio: Thunder Press






Editor's Notes and Comments:

Product Description:
What if a brilliant young scientist invented a new kind of computer that could hack into any other computer on earth? What if the government tried to kidnap her and steal it? What if terrorists got there first? “QUANTM ETHICS isn't only the best thriller I've ever read, it may be the best novel, period. The story is enough to satisfy even the most hard-core action junkies. But if you want more than just a terrific beach read you'll find that, too. If you love great characters, great action, and an ending that will take your breath away, read QUANTUM ETHICS.' --John Weldon, Cobalt, ID



Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - An exhilarating read
I loved the premise that a quantum computer could be designed that could hack into any system worldwide. Couple that with a sexy heroine and Thunder the mysterious special ops pro with an uncanny tracking ability and you have a recipe for a really fun thriller. Cassy was a really interesting character with amazing skills and way over her head.
This book flies by and is a great marathon read with loads of surprises and adventure.
I hope this is only the very first of a series and we have a lot more quantum thrillers ahead!
Rick




Rated by buyers 2 out of 5 stars - Quantum Ethics
The author is obviously an Obama fan and is pretty far left politically. This would have been a much better read without the Bush Administration digs and the Democratic talking points.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Great new thriller!
I just finished Quantum Ethics this morning and I truly enjoyed it.
I can't wait to read more missions about John Thunder and Quaalude;

The section that had Quaalude talking about his conversion to the amazonKindle, he sounded just like me when I tell my friends about the Kindle, a true convert! Not sure it fit in the book but that may be because he sounds just like me and maybe that is what I am comparing it to?

Quantum Ethics is one of the best reads I have read in a long while and
belive me I have read just about every thriller that is released. Brad Thor, Dale Brown, John Connolly, Jeffery Deaver, Paul Christopher, Joel Rosenberg,
David Stone, Mark Alpert, James Rollins, Christopher Reich, Jon Land, Steve
Alten, Steve Martini, Robert Ferrigno, Richard Hawke, and of course Lee
Child who signed my amazonKindle, his and my first. No more Cussler or Patterson for me they have sold out in my opinion.

Now I have added Keith Ellis to the top of my list and I would love to have Keith Ellis sign my amazonKindle some day. Casey C.




Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - More than a thriller...
Quantum Ethics is more than a thriller. It bravely tackles the scariest and biggest questions of our day. Through his vivid characters' conversations, actions and backgrounds, the author has a way of bringing those questions to life in scenarios that really did keep me on the edge of my seat. Somehow he even gives the characters a sense of humour to keep them (and the reader) sane through it all..

This book would make a great movie. It's packed with action and twists and turns so make sure you take your blood pressure medicine before reading this book.




Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - A Great Writer and a Great Read
In my opinion, the sign of a great writer is when you read an author's book and find yourself riveted to the page, when you're compelled to keep reading not just to find out what happens next, but because you are blissfully drawn into the world that the author has created. This is what happened to me when I started reading Quantum Ethics: A Thriller. And I can honestly say that, for the most part, it is indeed a thriller of the best kind.

One of the most compelling characters in the book, and now one of my favorite fictional heroes of all time, is a man named John Thunder. He's an enigmatic man who seems to have almost supernatural perception of the world around him, a sixth sense that makes him a tracker and investigator of unmatched skill. His backstory, and the means through which he acquires these skills, is a tragic tale full of ancient mysticism and real-world horror that somehow only makes what could come across as an unbelievable character all the more real. The entire book is filled with colorful and well fleshed out characters like the young genius Cassy and the hulking sidekick to John Thunder named Quaalude. These characters, plus many others whom we get to follow along the way, help to enhance this book as a modern epic tale of the violent and precarious world in which we live today. Unfortunately, I think this is also precisely where the flaws that prevent this excellent book from being perfect are the most evident.

While the story is indeed a thriller, and may I say that Keith Ellis writes extremely well throughout, handling both action and dialogue masterfully, at times the story veers too long from the main plot. There are sections of the book where discussions about Quantum Physics and, as the title suggests, the ethics related to the subject as they relate to the main plot of this story, seem to take a time out to give us lectures on these topics. Well written lectures, mind you, but they are misplaced, distracting and disrupt the forward momentum that this author has the uncanny ability to build with seeming ease. Admittedly the story, about the creation of the world's very first quantum computer, the moral and life threatening implications of its very existence, and the fight resulting for control of the device, is rife with deep and real moral implications. But at its heart the book is supposed to be a "thriller" and not a dissertation on social/moral ethics. There are times throughout the book where it loses sight of that fact.

I had the pleasure to read the Amazon Kindle version of this book, and to my delight and surprise I discovered a mention of the device in the midst of the story. And while this in itself should have been a cute moment for us Kindle fanatics, the story again veers off to have one character give the other a lesson on what the Kindle is and how it works. I would love to see a commercial about the Kindle during the commercial break on the Sci Fi Channel for the movie version of this story, but it just doesn't belong in the middle of the book.

And finally, without giving away the ending, I found that some of the characters behaved as if deranged or had no moral compass whatsoever. I love stories where the bad guys and the good guys aren't so cut and dried, because in real life, very few things are indeed clearly grey and white. But the good guys should generally be good, and when they suddenly become lustful for death and destruction, particularly when they are people of power and respect, I found it hard to believe. The final confrontation that decided the fate of the world seemed more like the author's proselytizing for an anti-war stance. And I find that particularly regrettable since I don't believe that was the author's intent.

But overall, I loved this book, and though I felt it could have been even better had some of the pauses in action been shorter and less "lecture-like", I would recommend that anyone considering buying this book definitely do so. Another sign of great writing is when the writing itself outshines any flaws you may find in the work, and Quantum Ethics: A Thriller, shines very brightly indeed.

- Gregory Bernard Banks, author, reader, reviewer

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