Praise for Emergent Properties
"A thoroughly delightful read, featuring complex and chewy family dynamics and a snarky AI sleuth. If you're missing your Murderbot fix, Emergent Properties is a worthy successor."—Sarah Pinsker, Nebula Award-winning author of A Song for a New Day
"An enjoyable thriller/mystery which hits all the marks of a Dashiell Hammett but in a new, AI sort-of-way. . .Emergent Properties is a short laser-focused packet of fun that even packs a message about what it means to be human—or at least what it means to have human parents."—The Wall Street Journal
"Pin-sharp, effortlessly brilliant, and endlessly engaging, Emergent Properties manages the impossible task of satisfying readers on the hunt for hard sci-fi, twisty mysteries, and deep relationships. It truly does it all. And Scorn zirself is one of the most absorbing characters I've ever encountered in science fiction."—Premee Mohamed, Nebula and World Fantasy Award-winning author of And What Can We Offer You Tonight
“Aimee Ogden and Scorn take us on a mind-expanding journey that explores the limits of intelligence and emotion. A compassionate, funny, relentless search for answers that raises many deep, beautiful questions.”—Samit Basu, author of The City Inside
"A twisty mystery that doubles as a potent, surprising, and necessary exploration of the many issues that arise from AI’s ever-increasing presence in the world."—Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Perfect for Murderbot fans."—Library Journal, starred review & May 2023 SFF Pick Of the Month
"A taut and compelling mystery with a surprising yet satisfying conclusion. SF fans will appreciate this intriguing, tightly plotted novella."—Kirkus
"Combines the best parts of Becky Chambers’ lovable android characters and Annalee Newitz’s hopeful but nuanced futures."—Ancillary Review of Books
"An impressive addition to the AI-as-central-character canon. It's both character-driven and a fast-paced investigation. I'm looking forward to more crunchy stories from Ogden."—Locus
Praise for Sun-Daughters, Sea-Daughters
"Absolutely gorgeous and deeply moving, this novella is familiar and strange at the same time, like a new interpretation of a beloved recipe."—Seanan McGuire
“A taut, heartfelt intergalactic fairy tale, with cosmic and personal vision.”—Max Gladstone
"Familiar and fresh, intimate and expansive — a fairy tale flung into the future.”—Kerstin Hall
"Sun-Daughters, Sea-Daughters is a short page-turner that feels epic in its world-building craft and the depth of its protagonists. At once a fairy-tale retelling and a lyrical space opera, it straddles many genres to tell one nostalgic yet utterly new story."—Booklist
"Poetic, emotional prose and a science fiction setting give an original twist to an old fairy tale. Ogden [...] takes "The Little Mermaid" to outer space and imagines the desires beyond love and land. This novella will tug at the heart of every reader."—Library Journal
"This novella will leave readers eager for more from Ogden."—Shelf Awareness
★ 05/01/2023
Ogden's (Sun-Daughters, Sea Daughters) new novella presents a future where artificial intelligences fight for equal rights and off-planet colonies agitate for independence, as seen through the eyes of the sarcastic, independent AI Scorn. Scorn is an investigative reporter, so waking up with no memory of the previous 10 days means ze was on the trail of a really juicy story even if ze can't access what that story was. Scorn is an advanced, autonomous AI that should have data backups, but all are gone. Still, ze is compelled to chase the story and the memories down, no matter where that chase leads, and against the strenuous advice of both of Scorn's human mothers, because ze knows this story will make zir reputation. Scorn will pursue the puzzle to the very bitter end—no matter where it leads or who ze has to take on. Scorn is fascinating as ze experiences the advantages and disadvantages of zir nature while also still dealing with being an adult child of domineering parents who can't let go. VERDICT Highly recommended for fans of "The Murderbot Diary" series by Martha Wells and SF mysteries in general, particularly John Scalzi's Lock In.—Marlene Harris
2023-05-09
A mystery set in a world where corporations have replaced governments and AIs can be emancipated.
Scorn wakes up with 10 days missing from zir memory banks. Ze soon figures out that ze got run over by a tram on the Moon—and zir last backup is missing. Ze concludes that ze must have been chasing a big story, possibly related to autonomy for the Moon settlements. Meanwhile, zir two “mothers”—the high-profile women who built zir novelty-seeking artificial intelligence—are fighting again, and they’re both trying to convince Scorn not to go back to the Moon. Like any rebellious artificial child, zir parents’ objections only make Scorn more determined to return to the Moon and get to the bottom of the story ze’s been chasing. Scorn’s world is largely governed by corporations and populated both by humans and by artificial intelligences, many of which are essentially knockoffs of the innovative process that created Scorn. As an AI, Scorn can back zirself up and download zirself into a different “chassis,” including human-shaped bodies as well as a small spiderbot. The story here is fast-paced and ultimately quite suspenseful. The world is complex, well conceived, and interesting, but there is a steep learning curve that may prevent some readers from getting right onboard with Scorn’s mission. Those who can handle being dumped into the middle of a strange new world will be rewarded with a taut and compelling mystery with a surprising yet satisfying conclusion.
SF fans will appreciate this intriguing, tightly plotted novella.