The End Note

by Andrew Rimas

8 Members 5 Reviews ½ (3.70)

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The planet is overwrought, overcrowded, and overcooked. Now the world looks to one, final summit of the world's most powerful people to save humanity. Then this guy gets invited... Professor Magnus Adams has failed at literature, at love, and, it seems, at life. After inexplicably receiving an invitation to a gathering of the world's most influential one-percenters, he finds himself harassed by anonymous text messages from someone who seems to know his most shameful secrets. Against the show more backdrop of a Trumpian world sliding into irrevocable catastrophe, Magnus grapples with technocrats and terrorists, cosmic horror and crushing hangovers as he tries to discover the identity of his tormentor. But little does Magnus know that there?s much more at stake than his precarious sanity. show less

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5 reviews
The main plot of Andrew Rimas’ The End Note sees protagonist Magnus Adams invited to a conference for the 5000 most accomplished thinkers of the near-future. They’ve been brought together amongst an end-of-times setting to fix all the world’s problems before society collapses and humans become extinct. Magnus does not know why he was invited, nor why he is being harassed by an anonymous texter.

The book, for the most part, reads like a satire. Take that in stride as it helps to put the reader in Magnus’ frame of mind. As the plot accelerates towards the end of the novel, the satirical style is dropped to flag a change in the protagonist’s mentality. Rimas has a comfortable writing style that kept me captivated with his tale. show more The way the author weaves Magnus’ expertise on (fictional) 19th century poet Nicholas Cooke into the story, making it central to the plot without making it overbearing, reminded me of the handling of V.M. Straka in Dorst and Abrams’ S. (Ship of Theseus); only without all the mystery and margin notes. The plot ebbs and flows, bouncing between the happenings at the conference and interludes on Cooke’s shenanigans. There is also a clever little Easter egg in the naming of the super-Ebola for those who know their WWII bioweapon research history.

Ultimately, I enjoyed this short read and would recommend it.

The publisher, Common Deer Press, provided me with a copy of the novel for early reviewing, however, the opinion expressed above is my own.
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½
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This was a great first novel. Rimas dives into what it means to be human while establishing his novel as a thriller and a meditative piece at the same time. There is much to be liked here, from the literary allusions to the character development and plot line. The style is accessible and easy for the reader to slip into. Also, the novel is a page turner- I finished it in one sitting. Rimas is surely going to make a defining mark in the area of literature. Try this novel out: you won't be disappointed.

4.25 stars!
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Full of self-loathing and ego, on both a personal and societal level, this book has hints of romance and mystery with a few spots of betrayal. Kind of like Origin by Dan Brown meets Leaving Las Vegas.
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This book is great if you like a little technology with your sci-fi. Or a little sci-fi with your technology? Whatever. The writing style is very matter-of-fact and seems to get down to the point rather quickly. The only thing I didn't really like was the roller coaster. It takes you up but never really reaches climax before it drops you again. Other than that this book is very well written and I would indeed recommend it to others who are interested in the genre.
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This is a good light scifi and first novel by Andrew Rimas. A definite example of Trump-Era eco and ethics scifi. While often fairly dry (not necessarily a bad thing), the novel does a good job of mixing a variety of hard and soft scifi elements and subjects with an unreliable, drunken ass of a narrator trying his best to be decent, and a wonderfully dumb - almost to the point of bizarro inspired at times - sense of humor. Various philosophies, AI, the Singularity, self driving (Otto) cars, humanities effects on the earth and other scifi and real science elements without driving particularly deeply into any of them. Like a lighthearted Egan or Steven Erikson's "Rejoice, A Knife to the Heart" with nods to themes explored more deeply in show more those books,as well as an 1800s poetry connection reminiscent of the Hyperion Cantos. This isn't a book that will change your life, but it is an enjoyable book worth spending on it the few hours it takes to read at just under 200 pages show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

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2 Works 121 Members

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Science Fiction, Suspense & Thriller
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PR6103 .O29 .R563Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature2001-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
8
Popularity
2,490,929
Reviews
5
Rating
½ (3.70)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
2
ASINs
1