Aremac Power

ebook Inventions at Risk · The Aremac

By Gerald M. Weinberg

cover image of Aremac Power

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Rebecca Shelley (R.D. Henham) wrote of Aremac Power, "The science is so real I felt like I could go out tomorrow and buy an Aremac-controlled wheelchair. Way cool. The characters were every bit as interesting as the science. Gerald gives an unbiased, inside look at a culture that many misunderstand and fear. This is a great book."

Aremac Power is a sequel to the popular Aremac Project, with many of the same loveable, brilliant characters. It is, as the subtitle suggests, a story about the risks of otherwise great inventions—and how they don't just cause the world to beat a path to the inventor's door.

For one thing, there is prejudice. Marna is a brilliant scientist of the first order, but she is a woman and a Navajo, which makes her work easily discounted by the white men in positions of power.

For another, there is entrenched wealth and power. If Marna's invention of a new source of energy is allowed its rightful place in the world, industrial empires will crash—oil, natural gas, all forms of power generation and distribution.

But most of all, there is personal weakness. Marna is dominated by her leech of a husband, who undermines her at every turn. Only with the help of Tesla does she learn to tap into her personal power, which in the end is greater than any invention.

Marna and Tess's story literally moves around the world—the nuclear laboratories in New Mexico, the traditional Navajo lands in Arizona, the degenerate casinos in Las Vegas, the sweatshops of Chicago, and the jungles of Africa.

As Tony Hlllerman said of the prequel, The Aremac Project, Aremac Power is "a thrilling glimpse into the near future. Don't miss it!"

Aremac Power