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Water Thief
Water Thief | Nicholas Lamar Soutter
1 post | 2 read | 1 to read
"There is no difference between the saint who gives food to starving children and the worker who operates the gas chamber that kills them, except that one is making money and the other is losing it." CHARLES THATCHER is a private citizen, which is to say that he's the private property of the Ackerman Brothers Securities Corporation. He's got problems: the cost of air is going up, his wife wants to sell herself to another corporation, and his colleagues are always trying to get him tossed into the lye vats. But when he discovers a woman stealing rainwater, he sees his chance to move up in the world, maybe even become an executive. He reports her, painting a picture, not just of a thief, but of a seditionist and revolutionary, someone who believes in that long-dead institution called "government." When she suddenly vanishes, he fears the worst and begins trying to track her down. What he finds is a nightmare far worse than he'd imagined-that his report on her may actually have been right. Now engaged with a small rebel group, Charles learns about life outside his corporation. But in a world where everything is for sale and lies are more profitable than the truth, he begins to wonder if even these revolutionaries have something to hide. Nick Soutter was born and raised in Massachusetts, where he lives with his wife and their two daughters. His works include From Inside the Mirror, Twin Mirrors, and Killdroid Rising
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MJSanty
Water Thief | Nicholas Lamar Soutter
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I really liked this book! It has parts of classic #scifi and parts of a #philosophy exploration. I am the exact audience that will enjoy this.
The sci-if books that it resembles most are Fahrenheit 451 and 1984 with its mixture of dystopia and an ambiguous ending that makes you reflect on everything that you‘ve read.
For some chapters the entire action is a philosophical conversation. So if you do not like that it might feel a little boring.

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