It took me a bit to get into this book since the gender neutral stuff was grating my nerves; reading "te" was just confusing and a little irritating. I thought it was funny as hell as Mason pretty much echoed my sentiments on the issue as it being a small sect of people that wanted to be special snowflakes forcing the rest of the world to accommodate them.
Once I got passed the first couple of chapters I really started to enjoy it. There seemed to be a big MGTOW/MRA theme throughout the book that I found surprising since those subjects aren't exactly popular at the moment.
As for the end of the book:
1) It was very Star Trekky (replace printers with replicators) in the manner of collapsing the economy. The big problem I see is how do you handle compensation for people that do jobs that don't actually produce a physical good? Who would design and construct roads, building, bridges, etc? How do you handle the service industry that can't be replaced by a bot or simply recycling a good (dirty laundry for instance)?
I guess some of it would be handled by people that simply enjoy what they do and do it for that reason without needing compensation. But there are some jobs that are tough, require education, and can't be done by the laymen (doctors, lawyers, skilled trades, etc).
2) What is Lexi's physical status? Is she an android or is she biological with an artificial brain? If she were a pure android, I would have expected Mason's scan of her at the beginning of the book to discovery some anomalies.
Once I got passed the first couple of chapters I really started to enjoy it. There seemed to be a big MGTOW/MRA theme throughout the book that I found surprising since those subjects aren't exactly popular at the moment.
As for the end of the book:
1) It was very Star Trekky (replace printers with replicators) in the manner of collapsing the economy. The big problem I see is how do you handle compensation for people that do jobs that don't actually produce a physical good? Who would design and construct roads, building, bridges, etc? How do you handle the service industry that can't be replaced by a bot or simply recycling a good (dirty laundry for instance)?
I guess some of it would be handled by people that simply enjoy what they do and do it for that reason without needing compensation. But there are some jobs that are tough, require education, and can't be done by the laymen (doctors, lawyers, skilled trades, etc).
2) What is Lexi's physical status? Is she an android or is she biological with an artificial brain? If she were a pure android, I would have expected Mason's scan of her at the beginning of the book to discovery some anomalies.