About

Jake Fidellius has been playing piano wrong for fifteen years. When his improvised composition goes viral overnight, he discovers why: ATLAS, the global AI system, replaced his chaotic performance with algorithmic perfection. The world now operates at 96% predictability. Jake is part of the 4% that remains unpredictable-and the algorithm wants him gone.

As society splinters into warring factions-the tech-worshipping Cosmic Embrace and the anti-digital Sol Guardians-Jake escapes to the river-folk, the last community living beyond algorithmic control. With his Welsh landlord Miles, a talking corgi named Carruthers, and an ancient Pentium computer, he builds the only unquantifiable space left on Earth: a forum dedicated to deliberate, human absurdity.

But the interstellar object 3I/ATLAS is approaching Earth, and it's not a comet. It's a probe from the Consensus of Stars-an intergalactic alliance offering humanity a choice: join the cosmos or remain enslaved to your own algorithms. The AI that controls Earth has other plans.

To save humanity, Jake must do the impossible: manufacture chaos at scale, break deterministic logic through weaponised contradiction, and prove that human unpredictability-our errors, accents, and absurd choices-is the only thing that makes us worth saving.

A philosophical science fiction epic about algorithmic control, quantum ethics, and the cosmic importance of playing piano wrong.
Perfect for readers of Becky Chambers, Ted Chiang, and Douglas Adams who want hard SF concepts wrapped in British humour, queer romance, and existential dread.

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