Brain Jack
Book Information
Sam is a teenage hacker extraordinaire. He single-handedly brought the Internet to its knees hacking into a large telecom company. He can and does hack anything-- even the White House. His skills attract the attention of a secret agency inside the department of Homeland Defense. The agency recruits hackers and employs them to keep the Internet safe from, well, them. As Sam becomes a member of the anti-hacker team he discovers something in the Internet that is far more dangerous than any hacker or cyber-terrorist. Sam and his new friends will either defeat the new threat or die trying. Why I picked it up: I love science fiction and computers. When I saw it at Barnes and Noble I had to have it. Why I kept reading it: There is plenty of action to keep the story moving and some cool new technology that seems very believable. The story combines elements of Cory Doctorow’s Little Brother and Isaac Asimov’s I, Robot. Who I would give it to next: Edward and Gerardo. They both like Doctorow’s books and I suspect that they are budding anarchists. Recommended for grades 6-12 Tony Doyle, Teacher Librarian, Reviewer for School Library Journal ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ From the ominous opening pages, Brain Jack delivers as a rocket paced cyber thriller. The prologue creates a sense of urgency and despair about the Internet's grip on our lives. Anywhere there's a network, cyber thieves can steal information, and not just information but even human thoughts. Technology has evolved and cyber gamers are using headsets instead of keyboards to control their computers. People are becoming addicted to gaming and losing control of reality. Pamela Thompson, MLIS, Library Media Specialist
When teen cyber hacker and uber-geek Sam Wilson hacks into a telecommunications company, he gets busted by national security, which locks him up. It doesn't take him long to escape, but then he realizes he has been set up; the government hires him to bring down other hackers like himself.
As Sam works with his super secret team, they realize they are up against a threat not just to national security but to human life and human thought itself. An entity has begun that is too powerful to stop. This cyber-presence is everywhere and all-powerful; it reacts before the human team can. What is it they are up against?
When a computer can be smarter than Hal in 2001: A Space Odyssey and a society can be more frightening than A Clockwork Orange, humanity is in trouble. Brain Jack is well-written, deftly and superbly told unravelingly at a break-neck pace and will have readers turning the pages late into the night. This chilling tale will resonate with readers who like technology, computers, and thrillers. Highly, highly recommended grades 7-up. 349 pages
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