Helpful Score: 4
A good read. A new twist on Big Brother is watching. You will never think of any of those on-line dating sites the same way again.
Helpful Score: 4
Good Read; not the best of Lincoln Child, but goode never-the-less.
Very up to date story line that shows us what might be possible some day with computers.
Very up to date story line that shows us what might be possible some day with computers.
Helpful Score: 3
Pretty good who dunnit murder mystery. Keeps you guessing on who is killing the perfect matches at a perfect matching date service. It could happen.
Helpful Score: 2
I read any and all things by Lincoln Child and his co writer Preston. This is a novel by Child alone about a super duper dating service. Very good story and I think it would make an excellent movie.
Helpful Score: 2
Great entertainment! Child conquers the complexities of artificial intelligence - fueling the plot with material usually comprehensile only to technogeeks. Impeccably in tune with the times.
Helpful Score: 2
This was one of my husband's reads, he said he thought I'd like it. I did, very impressed.We don't usually like the same types of books.
Helpful Score: 2
Interesting story but not technically accurate.
Helpful Score: 2
Nicely told story - and the end was unexpected.
Helpful Score: 1
never disappointed by this author
Helpful Score: 1
Everyone's looking for the perfect match, a life-long partner, and Lewis and Lindsay Thorpe have found theirs, thanks to hi-tech matchmaker Eden, Inc. But when the happy couple's life together ends in what looks like a double suicide, Eden Inc. has some explaining to do ..... and then another match ends in death.
*** Lincoln Child never disappoints .....
*** Lincoln Child never disappoints .....
Helpful Score: 1
Chilling account of supposedly "perfectly matched couples" that found each other through a high tech match making company, committing suicide.
Helpful Score: 1
This was a very attention-holding book. All of Child's book show wonderful imagination of plot, but not unreasonableness--in other words, it COULD have happened. I think this was one of his best, and a "must read" !!
Helpful Score: 1
Lincoln Child is an incredible writer both by himself and with Douglas Preston. This book keeps you tied in until the last page. A good story and good thriller.
Suspenseful and exciting. Can't put it down!
Lincoln Child spins a great yarn. Really enjoy reading his works. This was fast paced and unfortunately a little more predictable than some of the other works. However, a great entertainment!
Very interesting!
Fans of head-spinning thrillers like "The Stepford Wives" or "The Boys from Brazil" will want to input this baby right away. (Mystery Scene)
An exciting page-turner you really can't put down!
An exciting page-turner you really can't put down!
A very exciting book with alot of twists and turns, great ending.
Everyone's looking for the perfect match and Eden Inc has found a way to do that. But, the lives of their "perfect matches" are coming to an end. They hire a forensic psychological to figure out what went wrong.
My first Lincoln Child book, but will not be my last. The plot does not get bogged down and flows very well. Almost unexpected ending, but still a suprise. A good book to lose yourself into.
Great premise ... a bit far fetched ..., August 10, 2006
Reviewer: Book Junkie (Dallas, Texas)
** Possible spoilers **
Child obviously has done his homework regarding computers and AI. The premise is an interesting one, the storyline is very well developed and proceeds at an exciting pace. The ending is somewhat far fatched though; the computer Liza being the culprit and all. I mean, if it is capable of tracking Lash's activites and realizing that he is a threat, how come it cannot figure out the plan by our hero and his friends in the end that results in its termination?
Also there are a few loose ends that seem to be storylines in themselves - the stalker, Lash's past life, the enigmatic employees of Eden who seem to be hiding secrets etc. Were they added just to distract and keep you guessing? If so, they were not brought to a satisfactory conclusion.
This book is certainly better than Child's other solo effort - Utopia, a monumental bore despite the lofty title. I am still waiting for the next Douglas/Child joint effort, sans Pendergast, of course. I think we have had enough of the Holmes/Mycroft alter egos.
Reviewer: Book Junkie (Dallas, Texas)
** Possible spoilers **
Child obviously has done his homework regarding computers and AI. The premise is an interesting one, the storyline is very well developed and proceeds at an exciting pace. The ending is somewhat far fatched though; the computer Liza being the culprit and all. I mean, if it is capable of tracking Lash's activites and realizing that he is a threat, how come it cannot figure out the plan by our hero and his friends in the end that results in its termination?
Also there are a few loose ends that seem to be storylines in themselves - the stalker, Lash's past life, the enigmatic employees of Eden who seem to be hiding secrets etc. Were they added just to distract and keep you guessing? If so, they were not brought to a satisfactory conclusion.
This book is certainly better than Child's other solo effort - Utopia, a monumental bore despite the lofty title. I am still waiting for the next Douglas/Child joint effort, sans Pendergast, of course. I think we have had enough of the Holmes/Mycroft alter egos.
Not his best but a Good story on Computers a la HAL
Horror novel published in 2004 about computer matchmaking. A perfect match went awry when a double suicide occurred with one, and then another, of the "supercouples". I liked the technology and the psychology in the story.
This was another good techno-thriller from Child. The protagonist, forensic psychologist Christopher Lash, is hired by Eden, Inc. to try to find out why a perfectly matched couple committed double suicide. The couple was brought together by Eden as part of its highly-successful matchmaking business using high-tech computer matching techniques. The couple was a perfect match and had no predisposed tendencies toward suicide...so why did the suicides occur? And then as Lash starts investigating, another double suicide occurs with another perfectly matched couple. But did the couples commit double suicide or were they murder/suicides or were they homicides? As Lash delves into the possible reasons for the deaths, he seems to be implicated himself. The computer used by Eden is actually a form of artificial intelligence (AI) created by the firm's founder, Richard Silver, an eccentric who spends all of his time in the penthouse of the firm (a Howard Hughes-type character) and who only has contact with the computer who he named Liz. Overall, I would recommend this one.