The Unincorporated Man: Volume 1

· The Unincorporated Man Book 1 · Sold by Tor Books
4.5
29 reviews
Ebook
496
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

WINNER OF THE PROMETHEUS AWARD FOR BEST NOVEL

Dani and Eytan Kollin's The Unincorporated Man is a provocative social/political/economic novel that takes place in the future, after civilization has fallen into complete economic collapse.

This reborn civilization is one in which every individual is incorporated at birth, and spends many years trying to attain control over his or her own life by getting a majority of his or her own shares. Life extension has made life very long indeed.

Now the incredible has happened: a billionaire businessman from our time, frozen in secret in the early twenty-first century, is discovered and resurrected, given health and a vigorous younger body. Justin Cord is the only unincorporated man in the world, a true stranger in this strange land. Justin survived because he is tough and smart. He cannot accept only part ownership of himself, even if that places him in conflict with a civilization that extends outside the solar system to the Oort Cloud. People will be arguing about this novel and this world for decades.


At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

Ratings and reviews

4.5
29 reviews
A Google user
November 25, 2010
If ambitious professionals now seem to be unreasonably mortgaging their lives to pay school expenses, it may be nothing compared to what happens when it becomes a requirement of the state. This novel has popular scifi themes, including reanimation, liberation, space, nanotech, biotech, and big Neuro net. A world which had achieved long-sought automation of labor still managed to almost completely self-destruct.due to ethnic hatred. The memory of values from that era is locked in a capsule in the body of Justin Cord who becomes a temporal immigrant in a future that is simultaneously awesome and outrageous. Fortunately it brings a romantic partner in Dr. Neela Harper. Economic issues are at the center of the plot. Corporatism controls people’s lives throughout the solar system, GCI being the major one that demonstrates the evils to Cord. Folks trade stock in eachothers’ futures including selling relatives short. The resulting political parties include at least one which includes violence in its measures. The detail is reminiscent of Dune or the Foundation series. There are 16 long chapters, in which each of half a dozen major characters show up, and an epilogue, all told in the third person by the sibling author pair. Thanks.
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A Google user
December 24, 2010
The unincorporated man is one of the most interesting books that I have read in some time. Once I started reading it, I just could not put it down. The authors bring you into this future world, all the while, giving you everything you need to believe it could be real. The characters are full of life and fleshed out. It is SYFY without being too weird. I am half way through the follow on book “The Unincorporated War” which has the same style of plausible writing. If you like the human struggle, romance, technology, war, politics, etc. read both of the books.
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Thomas Jarrett
January 2, 2015
All 4 books in this series were great. Really brought some new sci-fi ideas and well thought out plots. I was really able to dive into the books and loose a few hours lost in my own world.
2 people found this review helpful
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About the author

Dani Kollin lives in Los Angeles, California. Eytan Kollin lives in Pasadena, California. They are brothers, and The Unincorporated Man is their first novel.

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