Black Market Memories by David A. Schramm

Black Market Memories Book Cover

Black Market memories is a story about a settlement many light years away from Earth named Jamestown. The residents can be individuals that had crippled bodies of some sort, then were given the opportunity to be “free” in a Stellar Unit (SU). The brain is scanned over a period of time then digitized and placed into a mechanical body. I would not classify these as cyborgs, but essentially AI that controls a ship of sorts. Some use the settlements as a base for research trips to find new worlds.

The story begins without any of the background I have described. My initial assumption was that these Stellars were humans in ships. The first few chapters were confusing without this background. It was obvious that the misdirection was intentional, but it didn’t sit well with me. Anyway, the opening chapters cover a kidnapping of an SU on her way back from a research mission. After this, Schramm gives us some background on two SU candidates and how they ended up in Jamestown. One was destined for a life of crime, the other to enforce the law.

The book’s title is derived from a limitation of the brain scanning process in creating a Stellar. The resulting AI has all of the existing memories and emotions of the original host. The problem is that they cannot experience new emotions. It seems to me that the title should have been Black Market Emotions, because it is obvious that the AI can create and store new memories, just not emotions. The Stellar can play back old memories and subsequently experience the emotions that happened at the time. The problem is that this gets old after a few thousand times.

For some reason, although the citizens of Jamestown are essentially AIs, Simgames are illegal. This is where the kidnapping comes in. To fuel an underground Simgame, Stellars are ambushed and captured for their memories. Emotion hungry subscribers for this underground game are addicted to this new source of memories/emotions.

This is where I have some serious problems with the story. Throughout the novel, characters are continually expressing emotions. They use words like fear, terror, love in conversation. Then later on they talk about longing to be able to feel emotion. Toward the end, I learn that Stellars can become suicidal due to emotional deprivation. That reasoning just doesn’t make sense. This book felt to me like it wanted to be a mystery. The conspiracy behind the Simgame was a mystery to the characters, but nothing was hidden from the reader.

Schramm has obviously spent a lot of time creating the various technologies that enabled the settlement of Jamestown. One thing I found interesting was Schramm’s use of CPU clock cycle rates for the Stellar Units. For humans in space travel, the problem is that it takes a long time to travel, so usually they are put into hypersleep of some sort. The SUs slow the CPU clock down so they don’t have to twiddle their thumbs while on a several hundred year trip. Arden, the law enforcement character, discovers that his SU is capable of much higher clock rates than anyone else. He can act much faster, giving him the advantage during his investigation.

For more information on David A. Schramm and his new book, please visit http://www.blackmarketmemories.com/

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please prove you are a human * Time limit is exhausted. Please reload the CAPTCHA.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Related Post

Daneel Olivaw, Guardian of HumanityDaneel Olivaw, Guardian of Humanity

R. Daneel Olivaw is my favorite character from the Robot and Foundation Universe created by Isaac Asimov. The R stands for “Robot,” but he became much more than that over the course of the Robot and Foundation series. Hari Seldon from the Foundation Novels ranks a close second, but my heart goes to Daneel and the Three Laws of Robotics. I’m amazed at how many twists can be made based on three relatively simple rules of behavior. Daneel starts as one of the first humaniform robots, but eventually evolves into much more complex being.

The following discussion is filled with spoilers for the entire Robot and Foundation series, so read it with that in mind. (more…)

Isaac Asimov’s Robot City Book 2: Suspicion by Mike McQuayIsaac Asimov’s Robot City Book 2: Suspicion by Mike McQuay

Robot City 2: Suspicion book cover

This review will most likely contain spoilers for any previous books in the series, read at your own risk.

After escaping from the alien Aranimas, and subsequently the space station that rescued them, Derec and Katherine find themselves miraculously transported to Robot City. They used the Key to Perihelion, a device that somehow allowed them to travel instantly across the galaxy. I like this idea because it is twist on space travel that allows the authors to work out unique plot elements throughout the rest of the series. Derec and Katherine arrive to find themselves the only 2 suspects in the murder of a human in a city full of robots.

It seems they’ve just traded one prison for another. Since they are the only humans on the planet, according to logic the robots think that one of them must have commited the murder, because no robot could have. This book revolves around Derec and Katherine’s investigation into the murder they are accused of at the end of Odyssey. Suspicion reminds me a bit of Elijah Baley’s murder investigations in Asimov’s original Robot Novels. The style is notably different, but the murder-mystery element kept me thinking back to the originals.

Tau Zero by Poul AndersonTau Zero by Poul Anderson

Book Cover

I came across a recommendation for Tau Zero by Poul Anderson on a top 10 list of science fiction novels. I was a bit intrigued because I recognized all of the authors on the list except this one. I did a little bit of research and found that this novel was more of “hard” science fiction. I wasn’t sure exactly what to except, and after just a few chapters I was pleasantly surprised.

A group of 25 male and 25 female scientists are selected to go on an interstellar colonization mission. Their ship, the Lenora Christine, is equipped with an advanced Buzzard engine. This engine is designed to feed off of hydrogen particles in its path while at the same time repelling other particles that would normally tear the ship apart at high velocities. The ship is designed to travel at near the speed of light, and relativity plays a significant role in the plot. After striking a nebulae that was a bit too dense for the Buzzard engine to redirect enough particles, the decelerator was damaged. There was no way to slow down. If they shut the Buzzard engine down to make repairs, they would be killed in minutes without the shielding. (more…)