The year is 2100 and the chaos of the early Internet era is long behind us. Mathematical proof ensures that neural implants canât be hacked, and the Board of Reality Overseers blocks false information from spreading.
When undergraduate Sergei Kraev, who dreams of becoming a professor, is accepted into a prestigious graduate program in computer science, he is thrilled, and throws himself into his assigned research projectâone important enough that if he succeeds, heâll earn the academic appointment of his choice.
But Sergei, plagued by insecurity, falls under the influence of Sunny Kim, the beautiful and charismatic leader of a K-pop cult. Sergei then makes a decision that leads him into a terrifying trap and places the lives of billions at risk.
With the clock ticking towards catastrophe, can Sergei escape and save the world?
Weaving together compelling characters and exotic locales, The Insecure Mind of Sergei Kraev is a classic tale of love, ambition, and self-interest building to a shattering finish.
Praise
âWhere do we go from the global disinformation and pandemic of 2020? A history told from multiple voices, an evocative projection of the world we may invent to protect usâand the ways in which humans being human can game any systemâthis is a fantastic read that I couldn't put down.â âCindy Alvarez
âIâve read thousands of sci-fi stories, and the thing that stands out for me here is the originalityâit doesnât quickly fall into some typical genre or pay tribute to some other great novel. This made it especially enjoyableâĻit deserves to be read and enjoyed widely!â âBryan Gaensler, PhD
âAn absolutely riveting readâa canât-put-down look at a world very much like our own, but with all our trends fast-forwarded.â âDrew Hansen
âSci-fi isnât the genre that I usually gravitate towards but Iâm honestly glad I stepped a bit out of my comfort zone. It kept me hooked and I gobbled it down. The tension was real and palpable. The characters spoke with honest emotion and I cared about them. Sergei is everyman without societyâs required hard, masculine shell. I loved him.â âRoxanna Sue OâConnor
Review by Jeffrey Liss
In so many ways, the world Eric Silberstein shows in this debut novel is the one we all wantâthe world we just know is coming. It is a world of nice things, where humans are online from birth, not merely masters of our technology but, finally, universally enhanced and empowered by it. Neural interfaces connect us to each other while protecting our privacy and gently compensating for our deficiencies.
Inside every utopia thereâs an unwelcome guest: human nature. What happens when a perfect world is inextricably linked to the minds of its imperfect creators? Are we the reason we canât have nice things after all? Has it always been this way? Silbersteinâs answer is both an incisive critique and jarring for its feeling of inevitability.
I loved and pitied Sergei for his innocence, his brilliance, and his ability to get lost in a crowd of his own thoughts. For all his talents, he suffers for want of what we all need: to love and to be loved, to feel a part of something lasting; to make things better than they are. Who am I to judge his mistakes? Would I have done any better?
Like all great Sci-Fi authors, Silberstein entices us with a good story, but holds up a mirror. In the end, I reached the conclusion I hope many other readers will enjoy reaching: I am Sergei, and I am why humanity canât have nice things.