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Athena's Choice (2019)

de Adam Boostrom

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4610550,826 (3.37)4
"Athena Vosh lives just like any other teenager from the year 2099. She watches reality shows with her friends, eats well, and occasionally wonders to herself, what would like be like if men were still alive? It has been almost 50 years since an experimental virus accidentally killed all the men on earth. However, a controversial project is currently underway to bring men back. There's just one catch. The project has been sabotaged. When the police of 2099 are tasked with finding the saboteur, they receive a mysterious command to investigate the otherwise innocuous Athena Vosh. After it becomes clear that the young girl might know more than she lets on, Athena is brought in to participate in the official investigation. Simultaneously, the girl begins to experience a series of cryptic dreams featuring a ruined library and an old book containing the saboteur's true identity. As the police close in on their prize, Athena finds herself on a journey of her own. Her clue-filled dreams and incorruptible spirit bring her face-to-face with a pair of forgotten truths about happiness and gender. The world waits to see if men will return as Athena fights a separate battle all on her own, culminating in the choice that will define her and other's lives forever."--Publisher description.… (mais)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 10 (seguinte | mostrar todas)
Set in 2099, a lot of things have changed, including all men, including trans men are wiped out due to the pandemic Y-fever virus. The only way to have a child is through artificial insemination and all babies are female too. So yes, no men at all...what? I am not sure I would want to live in that world, even though men can be annoying at times.
They are trying to bring back men, but obviously because the virus is still about they need to work out how to stop the men dying, they have a genome, Lazarus to help with this but someone has stolen the genome that was going to help with this process.

Athena, the main character is a 19 year old girl, she is requested to help to find out who has stolen this genome. Unsure why she is chosen but going although with it, she learns the truth about things and it is Athena’s Choice which could change the future forever. Will she decide to have men or no men?
The technology described in the book reminded me of Total Recall/The Demolition Man movies, they were very similar and thinking about the future I can see these being a real part of life.
The story flowed well, I was wary reading it during our own real life pandemic though.
I am not usually a fan of sci-fi and dystopia books but this did keep me engaged, although I will be honest I went into it blind, I chose it for the cover.
The author did a great job with this book and I will look out for more from him.
( )
  StressedRach | Jun 14, 2023 |
In a post-apocalyptic world where men do not longer exist, a girl inherits an unsavory secret that requires her to decide the fate of humankind. Athena's Choice proposes the reader to muse on topics such as feminism, gender identity, genetic engineering, and artificial intelligence; however, I think it does so superficially and a bit heavy-handed. I was appreciative of the world building and ingenuous futuristic alternatives that would facilitate daily life in this imagined pos-pandemic world. What I did not enjoyed is that some of the relationships and character development was not fully explore, leading to reader having to take certain events almost at face value. ( )
  GrettelTBR | Nov 15, 2022 |
This was an interesting YA sci-fi story. The characters are well-developed, and it’s interesting to think of a future without men. I would’ve like to see more of the world, and had different perspectives, although I didn’t mind following Athena. It was interesting to see how society was torn on the issue of whether men should be brought back, but at times it was a little uncomfortable with how men were referred to with such a broad (and negative) blanket. Overall, interesting, but not a book I’d read a second time. ( )
  LilyRoseShadowlyn | Apr 15, 2022 |
It's been decades since I read feminist literature like, e.g., 'Egalia's Daughters' by Gerd Brantenberg. I haven't thought of the premise of a matriarchal society for a very long time, so this book came as quite a surprise.
Where in the books I read back then women and men only had switched roles, so to say, Adam Boostrom is taking it one step further: men don't exist any more on earth. The whole population is female, and they are doing well.
However, some females want to bring back males, because they have fond memories, because they're curious, or because they don't feel complete without a male counterpart.
A renowned scientist is tasked with creating a genome that is resistant to the virus which killed all males five decades ago.
The catch is: somebody stole the genome before its completion.

Enter our heroine: young Athena Vosh.
She is somehow connected to the theft, and gets summoned before the AI who knows everything, and who is responsible for the well-being of the population -- alas, the AI isn't allowed to make decisions regarding life or death, which is why she needs somebody who is allowed to do this.

Athena agrees to help finding the thief, hoping she'll at last find a purpose in life, and maybe even excel.

But things don't quite turn out the way Athena had hoped. She makes acquaintances, and her dreams lead her in a direction I wasn't sure was beneficial for 'womanity' -- would she open Pandora's box?

The characters are well formed out, and the world is fascinating and vividly described. I loved the occasional advertisements throughout the book, as well as the description of all the technical achievements this future holds.
I'm not sure I'd want any of that -- well, maybe the massage thing -- and I certainly don't know what choice I'd make were I in Athena's shoes.
From where I stand now, the choice would be simple, because I have two sons and a grandson (and I had a brother), but if I had grown up without ever knowing any males...

This books combines various subjects: a coming of age story, a utopia, a bit of dystopia, and a future which still seems like science fiction now, but is looming around the corner, what with all the scientific and technological advances humanity has made.
There are enough twists to keep you listening (or reading), and the outcome is totally unexpected.

It gives food for thought, and will certainly stay with me for some time to come.

The narrator does an excellent job, and I especially enjoyed the way she narrated the advertisements. Her enunciation was very good, so that even I, as a non-native speaker, had absolutely no trouble understanding every word.

I received a complimentary copy and I chose to willingly post an honest review. ( )
  Belana | Dec 15, 2021 |
Menfolk went extinct about 50 years ago and since then the all woman world has cured hunger, made peace, experienced unprecedented economic growth etc. Kittens stay cute forever and makeup never smears…

Yeah I’m sure womankind could do that but if all men really up and died, one of the first thing they’d invent would be a whole fleet of Magic Mike Bots, just enough AI for pillow talk, Channing Tatum’s body with *ahem* that one appendage replaced with one of those magic rabbit wands - I say this as a gal who’s only interested in other boobies but I know damn well what my fellow ladies would be prioritizing. Now maybe these AI gigalos exist in Athena’s world but I doubt it since she’s has to sketch out her own thirst traps.

Good narration, not a perfectly linear timeline but the narration handles it smoothly.

Wanted to like it more than I could. Some of the world building felt a bit hollow if not optimistically sexist but that could just be because I’m a female reader watching a world of exclusively women as written by a man.

All the characters felt a bit flat except for the actual robot, probably because less personality is expected from AI.

Captain Bell is too sarcastic and flippant for a well awarded professional.

Honestly if any woman really thought the elimination of males would turn the universe into some kind of lesbian utopia we would have already witnessed the attempt at the first female instigated genocide. ( )
  BookSnug | Aug 19, 2021 |
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"Athena Vosh lives just like any other teenager from the year 2099. She watches reality shows with her friends, eats well, and occasionally wonders to herself, what would like be like if men were still alive? It has been almost 50 years since an experimental virus accidentally killed all the men on earth. However, a controversial project is currently underway to bring men back. There's just one catch. The project has been sabotaged. When the police of 2099 are tasked with finding the saboteur, they receive a mysterious command to investigate the otherwise innocuous Athena Vosh. After it becomes clear that the young girl might know more than she lets on, Athena is brought in to participate in the official investigation. Simultaneously, the girl begins to experience a series of cryptic dreams featuring a ruined library and an old book containing the saboteur's true identity. As the police close in on their prize, Athena finds herself on a journey of her own. Her clue-filled dreams and incorruptible spirit bring her face-to-face with a pair of forgotten truths about happiness and gender. The world waits to see if men will return as Athena fights a separate battle all on her own, culminating in the choice that will define her and other's lives forever."--Publisher description.

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