The Nexus Trilogy
Nexus (2012), Crux (2013), Apex (2015) | |
Author | Ramez Naam |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Publisher | Angry Robot |
No. of books | Three |
Website | Ramez Naam |
The Nexus Trilogy is a cyberpunk thriller novel trilogy written by American author Ramez Naam and published between 2012-2015. The novel series follows the protagonist Kaden Lane, a scientist who works on an experimental nano-drug, Nexus, which allows the brain to be programmed and networked, connecting human minds together. As he pursues his work, he becomes entangled in government and corporate intrigue. The story takes place in the year 2040.[1][2][3]
Nexus tied for Best Novel in the 2014 Prometheus Awards given out by the Libertarian Futurist Society.[4] It was also shortlisted for the 2014 Arthur C. Clarke award.[5] Nexus was published in 2012. Its sequel, Crux, was published in 2013.[6] The third volume of the trilogy, Apex, was published in 2014, and won the 2015 Philip K. Dick Award. The film rights to Nexus were purchased by Paramount in 2013.[7]
Plot summary
Nexus
Samantha Cataranes (Sam), an agent for the Emerging Risks Directorate (ERD) of the United States government, arrives undercover at a party looking for Kaden Lane. Kaden is there testing Nexus 5, an illegal, experimental nano-drug for direct input and output of brain signals. Sam talks with Kaden about his work and he invites her to be a part of a Nexus 5 study. Sam goes to the study and meets Kaden's close friends and colleagues: Rangan Shankari, Ilya Alexander, and Watson Cole (Wats). Sam takes Nexus 5, connecting her mind with the others, and they discover who she is and Kade uses Nexus to knock her out. When Sam awakes she threatens the group with prison, and promises a pardon in exchange for Kade's help. Wats escapes before the ERD extracts the group. The ERD describe a mission to spy on Su-Yong Shu, a brilliant Chinese neuro-scientist who is implicated in murder and brain control coercion. Kade agrees to work with the ERD and hand over Nexus 5. Kade and the group are sent to retrieve the Nexus 5 data, and on the way, they install a backdoor into the Nexus 5 operating system.
Sam is required to have permanent integration with Nexus 5, despite her disagreement with Warren Becker, the Enforcement Division Deputy Director at the ERD. Kade and Sam, now with the pseudonym of Robyn Rodriguez, travel to Bangkok for a conference that Kade is invited to by Shu. Wats follows in hopes of setting Kade free and spreading Nexus 5 to the general public. At registration, Kade hears an inspiring talk from Somdet Phra Ananda, discussing a Nexus-like topic, and meets Narong, a PHD student. Narong invites Kade to a student mixer the following night. After returning to the hotel Kade finds a secret note left by Wats, informing him of escape if needed. Kade recognizes that he needs to stay and attempts to notify Wats. Wats never receives the message.
At the opening night reception Sam discovers Narong is a known associate of Suk Prat-Nung, a nephew of Thanom Prat-Nung, a Thai Drug Dealer. Sam decides it is important to continue to track Narong in hopes of catching the Thai drug ring leaders. Kade finds Shu and is invited for lunch the following day, later changed to a dinner as she meets first with Ananda. Kade also discovers that Professor Ananda is under the influence of Nexus. After returning to the hotel, Sam reviews tapes from the day and discovers the interaction between Ananda and Kade and that Ananda also followed Kade home. Sam also discovers that a note has been passed to Kade, however she does not know that it was from Wats. Kade meets with Shu for dinner where she reaches into his mind to discover what he knows. Kade fights back and employs a mantra to rearrange his memories. Shu reverses the effect and discovers that Kade is working with the ERD. Kade discovers that Shu is the first mind uploaded to a computer system. She is trans-human and attempts to convince Kade to join her in fighting humans. Kade asks for time to think about her proposal. She creates false memories so that Sam and the ERD will not discover their true conversation.
Kade and Sam attend the student mixer to meet with Narong. He invites them to an after party in another area. On the way they go to Sukchai, an underground black market for everything trans-human. Kade realizes that legalizing these products would protect people, while Sam struggles with what is right. At the after party, Kade and Sam are invited to a Synchronicity party with Narong to try Nexus and another drug, Empathek. While leaving the party Sam and Kade are attacked. Sam defeats the attackers and calls for backup. The ERD backup arrives and extracts them. Sam confronts Kade about the interaction with Ananda, which Kade denies and arranges his memories to cover it up. The following day, Kade is approached by Shu at the conference. He recounts the previous nights events and Shu denies it was her people. Shu again tries to convince Kade that he should join the trans-humans. Kade takes a call from Ilya that reminds him that technology in the hands of only the elite is dangerous. Kade talks privately with Ananda. Ananda describes Buddhism as a democracy and how technology and knowledge must be shared.
Meanwhile, Wats discovers that Suk Prat-Nung set up the ambush on Kade and Sam. He also discovers a plot to ambush them again during their Synchronicity party and sends an email to Kade to warn him. Sam sees the email and notifies ERD to be available in case of an ambush. At the Synchronicity party, Sam and Kade take Nexus and Empathek. They both use their mantras to change their memories. Sam, believing she is now Robyn Rodriguez, talks with Mai, a young girl that was born with Nexus abilities. Mai unlocks Sam's true memories and contributes to a great change inside Sam. Sam, overwhelmed by her sudden realization of the power of these drugs and released from her horrible past, talks with Kade. She releases his true memories and recounts her dark past. They both fall asleep. Upon waking they find Thanom Prat-Nung and his guards in the room. Narong, under the influence of Nexus 5 and the ERD, draws a gun on Thanom. Narong is killed by Thanom's guards and the ERD sends three team of men into the building, open firing despite Sam's warnings of civilians. Mai and the other members of the party are killed. Sam kills several ERD agents. Kade fights the ERD soldiers. Wats joins the fight and is killed. The ERD detonate explosions in the skulls of the soldiers. Sam and Kade escape.
Suk Prat-Nung still alive, with a few of his men, continues to fight Sam and Kade. Kade is captured while Sam defeats some of Suk's men. Kade uses Nexus 5 to control the actions of his captor, Suk, to escape. Suk is killed. Feng, Shu's driver and a super soldier clone, rescues Kade and Sam, bringing them to a monastery. Sam and Kade spend some time recovering at the monastery while the ERD searches for them. An ERD recon spider robot discovers Sam and Kade's location, and the ERD sends a team to retrieve them. On her way to the monastery, Shu and Feng discover the ERD helicopters going to the monastery. They get a message to the monastery. Kade decides to mass distribute the Nexus 5 instructions. The ERD capture Kade placing him bound on a helicopter. Sam forces her way onto the helicopter, along with Feng. Shu takes control of the helicopter with her mind and forces it to return to the monastery. Before arriving two Thai fighter jets destroy the helicopters just as Kade, Sam, and Feng leap into a nearby lake.
After returning to the monastery, the ERD recon spider robots shoots a neuro toxin at Kade and Shu. Feng cuts Kades right arm off to prevent the spreading of the toxin. Shu is killed. Nexus 5 is spread around the world, despite the efforts of government forces. Warren Becker, the Enforcement Division Deputy Director at the ERD, commits suicide. Kade uses gecko genes to grow back his arm.
Crux
Six months after the upload of the constructon plan of the Nexus, a nano drug,which allows the brain to be programmed and networked, connecting human minds together, the world faces terrorism and massive abuse of the new technology. The Liberation Front, a terror cell secretly created and headed by the US-American government, spread terror in the name of posthumanism, to prevent people from using the new technology and bring up an atmosphere of two 'n' eight to take drastic measures against Nexus.
In the meantime, our protagonist Kade and his new friend, clone warrior Feng, are fleeing from the CIA, which want see them both killed. On the elopement Kade is trying to stern the misuse of the nano drug to prevent a war between posthumans and humans. He has a code to the Nexus system that he can use to hack it.
The secret services are very interested in the code. Ilya Aleander dies as prisoner because she didn't gave the code to her turnkeys. Rangan Shankari can escape.
Su-Yong Shu died in Nexus and lives as a computer intelligence and prisoner on server belonging to the Chinese government. Ling Shu, her daughter, tries to help her mother to escape. At the end of the book, the mother uses Ling Shus Nexus system to hack her brain and take over the body of her daughter.
In Thailand, Samantha Cataranes helps in a protectory.
Apex
Previous
A new nano cyber drug called Nexus is released in the year 2040. It connects human minds and allows the brain to be programmed. The protagonist Kaden Lane works on the illegal drug and is suddenly entangled in government intrigue. The nanomedicine is the breakthrough to posthumanism which governments and corporations fear and try to stop. Su-Yong Shu, a brilliant Chinese neuroscientist with an uploaded mind, tries to start a posthuman revolution. Soon Kaden Lane, who is summoned to spy on her, becomes her ally. The US American government hunt both; at the end Su-Yong Shu's body dies, her mind is isolated on a Chinese server park and Kaden Lane has to flee with his friends. He makes the nano drugs available for humanity. Soon a global unrest spreads: terrorists using the nano drug for assassination, the governments trying to assassinate Nexus users. Meanwhile, Su-Yong Shu is nearly killed (shutting the server park down) by the Chinese government and her husband; at the end, she is rescued by her daughter.[8][9]
Apex
US and China in particular and the Earth, in general, are aroused by disturbances. Unrests and riots spread with Nexus-upgraded protesters and police and Su-Yong Shu, the former dead neuroscientist who stole her daughter's body by downloading herself into it, tries to take over all electronic systems and with them the entire world, recreating it to fit her imagination. The posthumans are called Apex, the climax, and reinstatement of humankind.[10]
Film adaptions
The film rights to the novel series were purchased by Paramount in 2013.[7]
Futurism themes
The novel is heavily based in, and extends concepts in the author Ramez Naam's 2007 non-fiction work More Than Human: Embracing the promise of biological enhancement, in which the author argues for a technology like the fictional drug Nexus.[3]
Precursors of mind-to-mind communication
A series of brain-computer interface experiments have been conducted in order to test the brain's ability to communicate directly to an external device. These experiments are often directed at assisting, augmenting, or repairing human cognitive or sensory-motor functions.
An experiment conducted at Duke University led by a scientist, Miguel Nicolelis, discovered that by implanting electrode arrays into a monkey's brain they were able to detect the monkey's motor intent and thus able to control reaching and grasping movements performed by a robotic arm. On January 15, 2008, Dr. Nicolelis's lab went even further and had the monkey control a robot 600 miles away, walking on a treadmill in Kyoto, Japan.[11][12]
Later work done by Phillip Kennedy and colleagues built the first intracortical brain–computer interface by implanting neurotrophic-cone electrodes into one man, Johnny Ray, a stroke victim unable to move muscles below his face. With the connection made, the electrodes can record the electrical impulses that travel across neurons when thinking occurs. Those signals are transferred to a transmitter embedded beneath the scalp. Amplified 1,000 times, the signals go to a computer, which translates them into cursor movement, allowing him the ability to communicate simply by thinking.[13]
Other research has seen success with sensory data, including advances in cochlear implants and neural visual prosthesis.
Not only have advances been made in imputing sensory data to the brain, but also in retrieving data from the brain. Jack Gallant at UC Berkeley showed that by using an MRI machine they could construct a video of what the person was currently seeing.[14]
Only a small amount of data is being used in these experiments, only about 256 electrodes (in contrast the brain has around one hundred billion neurons). A possible proposal from Rodolfo Llinás uses carbon nanotubes and if implemented could achieve higher volumes of electrodes, over a million.[15]
Genetic enhancements
The genetic enhancements to boost strength, speed, and stamina, as described in Nexus, are likely already possible, argued so by Ramez Naam.[16] Over the decades researchers looking to cure muscular dystrophy, anemia, and other ailments have shown that a single injection loaded with additional copies of selected genes, and delivered by a tame virus, can have lifelong impact on the strength and fitness of animals, ranging from mice to baboons.
Operating system backdoor
The Nexus backdoor that is created by Kade and Rangan in the novel is based on the Karger and Schell Multics backdoor, implemented experimentally by Ken Thompson, co-inventor of the Unix operating system.[17]
References
- ↑ "In Brief: Science Fiction". Wall Street Journal. 2012-12-22. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2014-09-25.
- ↑ "Nexus - Because Your Brain Deserves Only The Best OS". WIRED. 2012-12-18. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
- 1 2 "Nexus imagines a world that is posthuman, not transhuman". arstechnica.com. Retrieved 2014-09-25.
- ↑ "Prometheus Award Winners Announced - SFWA". www.sfwa.org. Retrieved 2014-09-25.
- ↑ Rivera, K. Arsenault (2014-03-18). "The Arthur C. Clarke Awards 2014 Shortlist Has Been Announced!". Tor.com. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
- ↑ Naam, Ramez (2013). Crux. New York: Angry Robot. ISBN 9780857662965. Retrieved 2014-09-25.
- 1 2 "Paramount buys film rights to 'Nexus' sci-fi novel by Seattle's Ramez Naam". www.geekwire.com. Retrieved 2014-09-25.
- ↑ "Nexus". Goodreads. Retrieved 2016-04-02.
- ↑ "Crux". Goodreads. Retrieved 2016-04-02.
- ↑ "Apex". Goodreads. Retrieved 2016-04-02.
- ↑ "Monkey Think, Robot Do". Scientific American. January 15, 2008.
- ↑ "Monkey's Thoughts Propel Robot, a Step That May Help Humans". The New York Times. January 15, 2008.
- ↑ Brendan I. Koerner (December 26, 1999). "Phillip Kennedy". US News.
- ↑ "Identifying natural images from human brain activity.". PubMed.gov. March 20, 2008.
- ↑ Rodolfo Llinás (2005). "Neuro-vascular central nervous recording/stimulating system:Using nanotechnology probes". Journal of Nanoparticle Research.
- ↑ Ramez Naam. More Than Human: Embracing the Promise of Biological Enhancement.
- ↑ Ken Thompson (Aug 1984). "Reflections on Trusting Trust".