![]() When he fails to persuade them, he uses his override passwords to shut down the keno game, which quickly gets the attention of Edwin Rutledge, the head of the casino. Nick Chen is an IT guy on a mission: when quantum computers become available to consumers, he tries to convince the managers at the Babylon Hotel and Casino where he works to shut down their keno lounge, knowing that quantum computers can quickly crack the random-number generators of the keno game system. Full review first posted on Fantasy Literature: Dazzling science can't make up for a mundane plot. ![]() So let’s leave two stars and get the hell out of here for a better reading ASAP!Ģ.5 stars. I thought I’m going to devour all of them and have so much fun but even Martian’s author can disappoint me which is not a first. This is most boring and dry book of the series. But I’m happy with the ending because the story finally ended and I can delete the book from my kindle and forget it forever! Yaaaayyyy! One more reason to drink one more chilled glass of Chardonnay! (Everybody sends me Carol Kane’s “Chardonnay Lady” gif from the movie “Dead Don’t Die” and I highly deserve this nickname!) I didn’t like the way the author told the story. (I think it’s trapped in a tunnel with more likable, better developed characters and more interesting story!) So the book I expected to love so much cannot be reach at this moment. (This must be worst version of Russian Doll series! You die over and over again at the very same night and find yourself at the same bathroom, looking yourself in the mirror as the same song plays…) I felt like I was trapped in a place keeps playing the same death metal song in high volume over and over again. I was so disturbed to take a nap and get a break. It is written in quantum mechanics bla bla bla language, (most of the words of it went in my one ear and out the other one!) exhausted me so much. Thankfully this is not my first book at this series because if I start with that, I probably give up on them! This is the most boring, dullest, meaningless story I’ve read from the Forward collection. So why, oh why, did the “bad guy” have to be a brown woman? Out of the top 10 global cities using GoodReads, four of them are in India-Mumbai, Delhi, Pune, and New Delhi. Oh and guess which country is the largest user of GoodReads aside from the United States? India. Troy is routinely rated as one of the safest cities in Michigan. I live in Troy, Michigan where there is a very heavy Indian population. Out of all of the people in the world that Andy Weir could have made the bad guy, he has to pick on the brown woman? The Last Conversation by Paul Tremblay - ⭑⭑⭑⭑☆ You Have Arrived at Your Destination by Amor Towles - ⭑⭑⭑⭑☆ By far the least interesting and least engaging of the six, in my opinion. I got to the end and was like "Is that it?"Ĭold, distant characters, boring story. Weir spends the first half geeking out about coding and computing, never developing any of the characters, and then the second half just fizzles out. That opinion being that this story was so dry and dull. I got my partner to read this too because I wondered if all the discussion of quantum computing was more interesting to a techie computer geek, but he shares my opinion. It felt almost as if Weir didn't even try. I can now say that Randomize was by far my least favourite story. ![]() Mostly because authors like Blake Crouch and N.K. Nothing about this made me want to read on. That made Randomize the first story I read. For no real reason, I decided to read through the Forward collection in order of length, starting with the shortest.
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