NEW! AI-Created Visual Supports for Special Ed Classrooms Check out our Etsy shop or download our FREE Visual starter pack

PURSUITS UNKNOWN

Book Cover

Dogs and humans trying to stop high-tech
data thieves find themselves facing a genocidal religious cult in this debut futuristic
novel.

When Amy Callahan, an employee of
the rescue agency Locate and Investigate, gets the call to find a missing robot
scientist, it seems like just another day on the job. With a team of dogs who
are empaths like herself, Amy and her canine companion, Lars, set out on the
hunt and find their quarry quickly. But when the disoriented man turns out to
be the victim not only of kidnapping, but also of intentional nanobot
contamination, LAI investigators and their trusted animal sidekicks are drawn
into an increasingly dangerous inquiry. In a society where cars and planes operate
themselves and computer keyboards and revving engines are relics of the past,
humans and dogs are beginning to forge telepathic communication through the “Canine
Language Project.” Amy and the brave, intelligent kelpie/shepherd mix Lars work
side by side with other human and dog partners, such as Gimli, a burger-loving
Corgi who specializes in placing surveillance bugs in delicate places. On the
trail of the data thieves who infected two robotics experts with deadly
nanobots, Amy and Lars go on an undercover mission to investigate a
megalomaniacal religious leader who seeks domination on Earth and beyond. Clary’s
vision of the future is grounded in the emerging field of nanorobotics and the
fanciful concept of dog-human communication. This sci-fi series opener is believable
and intriguing; readers may wonder, for example, if Amy’s helpful “olfactory
reflectometer” is a real or visionary investigative tool. The author also does
a satisfying job of creating a convincing portrait of canine consciousness,
with exchanges that expand the animal-human relationship while preserving an
essential dogness in the pooches’ personalities. Issues like the ethics and
legalities of using dog evidence inject a note of realism into a story that
might otherwise seem far-fetched. The plot, which combines technology with
religious zealotry, is pleasurably creepy, although the division of the book
into 69 short chapters, with such prosaic titles as “Amy Talks with John” and “Tomas
and Adam Talk,” seems choppy and baffling.

A sci-fi mystery tackled in style by
a feisty canine-human detective team.

kirkusreviews.com

Add comment