Cover Image: The Future Is Yours

The Future Is Yours

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

A very unique story told in the form of emails, text messages and snippets from congressional testimony. The story flows rather well and keeps you engaged the entire time. I really enjoyed the way everything is eventually revealed while still keeping it interesting. I recommend it to anyone who loves light sci-fi reads.
Was this review helpful?
WOW! I could NOT put this book down. I really loved the layout of the book, the back and forth of emails, the texts, and the senate committee discourse gave me the racing feeling of impending doom.
This book also made me think of all the new ways that the internet could be used.
Also, would you want to learn about something you did ONE YEAR in the future?
This book really made me think and got my heart pounding. 
I Loved it and can't wait to read more from this author.
Was this review helpful?
Trying to get my head around the tech concepts in this book at times made my mind feel like a pretzel.  But in a good way.  I read quite a bit of science fiction.  I thought I'd read many of the storylines that are commonly used but this, like the book, The Immortals, asked the question' "do we really want to know what the future holds". and what would we do with the information if we had it.  This story revolves around a very few main characters, the two prime ones being a genius tech wizard and his best (and seemly only friend) who together develop a computer program that can pull data and allow them to gain knowledge of events one year in the future.  Instead of using this knowledge to gamble or corner the market they choose to begin a start up company, seek venture capital monies and begin the task of giving this knowledge to the masses by founding a tech company they believe will make them billions.  They launch this venture with what appears to be an over abundance of naivete and an inability to foresee how this knowledge even between the two of them will lead to nothing but problems.  I found the concept of this story both mind bending and possible in a way that much science fiction is never able to achieve.  
The story gives a small glance in how knowing future is not exactly what you expect.  I gave the concept and much of the execution of the idea 5 stars.  Some of the problems were to be predicted but the writer came up with a wide variety of events that were both unique and imaginative examples of all that could go wrong.  The writing was straight forward and easy to understand.  I wish I had paid more attention to the dates that head each chapter as toward to end I began to see their importance and had to go back and see if I had missed exactly how these played a part in the storyline.  
I came to know these character and even care about them as the story progressed.  I found this hard at first as the story is written in emails, texts and blog posts.  While the style was appropriate and worked well with the content I found it initially to keep me at a distance as my own tendency (and I think it is true for many) to skim emails rather than read them carefully.  That for me was the primary flaw that made this slow going at first but about half way thru I became invested and was anxious to see how the story would evolve.
All in all I found it a particularly appealing Sci fi work and felt it was an exceedingly strong debut by this author.
Was this review helpful?
The Future is Yours is all about tech gone mad.  Frey's talents in screen writing and design, might have been the impetus leading to the epistolary style of this work.  Told in a retrospective view, the emails, articles and data from Senate hearings  allow  the reader to  reconstruct the rise and fall of a Silicon Valley company that changes the world.  What if a device existed that would transmit information from the future to the present?  What if a person knew when they would die? or what stock would tank in a week? or.. what troops were mustering on foreign soil? 

The start up company, The Future, combines computer design with quantum processing to engineer a device that in fact can do these things.  The men involved are more boys than men.  They are young Silicon Valley tropes.: one filled with machismo and sliding ethics  (Boyce), the other with soul cringing introspection (Aldi)  Together this unbalanced pair show the perils of pushing a concept while leaving ethical considerations behind.  

Frey's ear for dialogue provides banter between  the two is very reflective of current language, as are the more formal speech patterns from the Senate hearings . For me, both protagonists were unlikable, and perhaps that was the point.  The reader was left pondering what indeed would happen to the world if the Future was part of our now.  Certainly not golden age science fiction, with fumbling robots and space pirates, this novel present s the sticky issues of our rapidly changing times. 

Full disclosure I received this review copy from netgalley and Del Rey in exchange for an honest review.  Thank you for this opportunity.
Was this review helpful?
Adhi Chaudry had an incredible idea for his graduate dissertation. But because it was believed to be utterly unrealistic, it was not approved. However, Adhi knows it is, indeed, possible. When he tells his friend, the charismatic Ben Boyce, about it, they decide to use the idea to get rich. They plan to market Adhi’s special computer that can see one year into the future. After all, who would not want to see the future? This is Adhi’s story.

This story is told only through emails, articles, and other such forms of communication. This method seemed strange, at first, but it certainly makes the story feel very, very real! There is another reason for this format, too. An awesome one that you will discover at the end of this book!

Very realistic characters and this mysterious format really make this book an incredible experience! It truly makes you think!

I was given a free copy of this book in exchange for an unbiased review.
Was this review helpful?
When I started this book and realized its unusual structure, I almost stopped. I'm glad I didn't. By 'unusual structure,' I'm referring to the fact that the book has no traditional narrative prose. The story is told completely via text messages, emails, articles, and congressional transcripts. Despite my early doubts, the story quickly engrossed me and I plowed through it in a couple of late-night sessions.

It's the most accessible "time travel' book I've read in a long time. Unlike so many of this type of book, the technology seems far more plausible and thus it's easier to suspend disbelief. The characters are well developed and the protagonist in particular has a really strong character arc that unfolds believably throughout.

I recommend this one!
Was this review helpful?
Thank you to both NetGalley and Random House/Ballantine/Del Rey for allowing me to review an advance copy of Dan Frey’s debut novel, The Future is Yours.

The Future is Yours uses a compilation of Congressional testimony, text messages, Twitter responses, Reddit, emails, and various tech news articles to tell this incredibly thought-provoking story. Although this format is not unique and has been done many times before by countless authors, it somehow seems to work better for this particular novel since its central focus is technology.

Business partners, Adhi Chaudry and Ben Boyce, have created “The Future.” The Future is the name of their company as well as the computer they invented, which allows them to see the Internet one year from the present. Set in Silicon Valley, the novel guides the reader through the stages of a tech startup, including the ethical concerns that tech innovators face on a regular basis. 

The novel is a fast, genuinely entertaining read. I can’t say too much without spoiling the main events, but if you love tech, ethical debates, the notion of time traveling, and want to experience a less conventional method of storytelling, I’d say this is a pretty great find. 

Also, if you work in tech, it may feel as if the information provided throughout only scratches the surface and is too simplistic (probably so that the average reader can understand it), but it does provide a familiar account of what it is like to work in Silicon Valley's Startup culture, and you will definitely be able to commiserate.
Was this review helpful?
Pros: The premise is interesting and the plot moves along at a quick clip and occasionally does cool things with that premise. Due to the format it is also extremely easy to skim.

Cons: Reading the email exchanges of tech bros is just not very interesting. The main character, Ben, is especially annoying to read. Both for stylistic reasons (his voice in emails is a lot of <i>This is going to be <u>sick</u>; the train is moving so get out of the way!</i>) and deeper reasons, like being completely unable to grapple with the implications of his technology in ways that seemed implausible.
Was this review helpful?
This is a novel told in a series of emails, memos, transcripts, other similar documents but excluding all conventional dialog or narration. It follows to some extent a pioneering novel by Dos Passos and a classic from the ‘60s by Brunner with e compiler is finally revealed in the last few paragraphs. The book suffers from this format because the needed narrative threads then have to be contained within the reproduced documents which is often awkward. One example is a husband and wife sending business-oriented memos to each other instead of chatting in person or over the phone. This is a format that can enhance a novel but not become one. 

The author decided to use this format and stuck to it religiously even when it stopped working. That point was when a re-thinking should have taken place but it didn’t. Another issue is placing a novel about the immediate future using real people and events. For example, the novel (or the version I got) has Justice Ginsburg alive in 2021 – something that I know to be false making suspension of belief, for me at least, impossible through the rest of the novel. 

I found no likable major characters. Each one was stubborn refusing to listen to reason as well as unwilling to evaluate the consequences of their actions.  However, the overall problem is that this is a time travel or time-shift plotted book. Like almost all of them, Split Second by Richards and Hawksbill Station by Silverberg being exceptions, the time travel or time peeks raise so many questions and paradoxes that they crush the book. 

Here the initial explanations raised more questions than they answered. Further piling on along with added discoveries only added to the mess. In the end, we have self-centered people we’re told are intelligent acting persistently stupidly and wreaking havoc both personally and universally as they blunder along.
Was this review helpful?
I really enjoyed this’ time travel with a twist’ book. I really would have given it 5 stars if not for some coarse language. I’m usually not a fan of the way it’s written in memos, texts and etters but you get used to it after a while and it pays off in the end.
Was this review helpful?
This is a super fast read. Not a narrative with dialogue, it chronicles the rise and increasingly unstable success and future of a Silicon Valley startup called "The Future", through a series of primary sources such as texts, e-mails, reports, and transcripts of Congressional hearings.
A forward thinking and brilliant student of Computer technology and his equally ambitious friend cum business partner team up to create a machine which can access itself through time, allowing a user to retrieve information from a specific point in time in the future. Initial searches by the founders indicate enormous financial success. and they work hard to build and grow the company they have already seen. Set firmly in the present, we read as the protagonists communicate their navigation of fundraising, encountering various venture capitalists, y-combinator, and Elon Musk along the way. Also addressed throughout are fundamental ethical issues presented by time-travel and prescience. Periodic doses of religious and philosophical thought, as well as ruminations about popular Sci-Fi and Fantasy are also presented as blog posts, Again, a fun and quick read with some mysterious goings on.
Was this review helpful?
Time travel is one of the most persistent and fun tropes in science fiction. The list of time travel books, TV shows and movies is staggering - from HG Wells to Doctor Who to most recently, the mind-bendingly bizarre movie Tenet,. Into this crowded but seemingly inexhaustible field comes The Future Is Yours by Dan Frey. As with much science fiction, though, the time travel element is not point here, or at least not wholly the point as Frey takes on Silicon Valley, the venture capital industry, social media and the tech giants.
The Future is Yours is based on an old science fiction premise. That is, that while physical objects cannot be sent back in time, due to quantum entanglement information can. This premise has been used in books like Gregory Benford’s 1980s award winner Timescape and more recently by William Gibson in Peripheral and its sequel Agency. But unlike those books, Frey takes a completely new angle. In The Future is Yours entrepreneur Ben and his genius partner Adhi discover technology that allows them to search the internet a year into the future and decide they want to monetise the idea. They want to create a desktop timescope that will allow anyone to peek into information from the future. To do this they need money, and money comes from venture capital and soon they find themselves swimming in the dark waters of unbridled capitalism.
The overarching narrative is provided by evidence that Ben is giving before a Senate Committee a month before his world changing product is going to launch. While at first the predictive capacity of the technology is seen to be infallible, as the hearing progresses the reader discovers that this premise seems to be falling apart behind the scenes. Over the course of the narrative, Fey deals with corporate malfeasance, the male-dominated culture of silicon valley, the pursuit of profit over ethics, the use of lawsuits as weapons of hostile takeover and the amount that all of this is underpinned by personal relationships.
So that in the end, The Future is Yours is more like a science fiction version of The Social Network with Ben as Zuckerberg and Adhi as Saverin. Only not quite. The relationship between the two is a little more complicated and involves a third party, Boyce’s wife Leila, who is also Adhi’s best friend and secret (and later not so secret) crush. It is the personal relationship and conflict that drives this story as much as the technological, ethical and legal challenges that keep coming their way. Along the way, through Adhi’s blog, Frey also gets to reference and geek out about some of the touchstones of science fiction – Star Trek, Blade Runner, Doctor Who, Frankenstein, Dracula and even A Christmas Carol – also used to ram home some analogies in the plot.
The Future is Yours is narrated in epistolary style. It is made up of a collection of emails, text messages, articles and transcripts. So reader’s patience with this will depend on their willingness to accept this style. Sylvain Nuevel used this approach to mainly good effect in his Themis Files trilogy, although the approach was a little forced by the third volume. The Future is Yours is a stand alone and so there is less chance of it outstaying its welcome. But it is difficult in this surface style of narrative to really get a feel for the characters.
The Future is Yours asks a very simple question – if you could know the future, particularly if you then know it can’t be changed, would you want to? Dan Frey bakes this ethical conundrum into a page turning take down of the tech industry and of Silicon Valley in particular. And while he has to resort, as all time travel tales ultimately do, to a little sleight of hand that asks readers to seriously suspend their disbelief, he does, for the most part, make it work.
Was this review helpful?
This book is a very different concept about, well, a very different concept. Two computer/math whizzes come together to complete their baby- a machine that can move the operator into the future and back again. Genius, right? But they fail to consider that just because they can do this, should they?

The book unfolds in a choppy mix of Congressional hearing records, private texts, meeting recollections, and letters.. It can be hard to follow but then that also reflects the chaos going on in these two young men’s minds and lives. The book is an interesting exploration  of the conflict between progress and reality.
Was this review helpful?
I felt like the memo/email/etc. technique was a bit gimicky.  I also didn't like anything about the main characters; I didn't find them sympathetic.
Was this review helpful?
THE FUTURE IS YOURS, by Dan Frey, is about Ben, a charismatic leader, and Adhi, a brilliant introvert, who have been close friends since college.  They start a company based on a theoretical paper Adhi wrote in grad school about looking into the future.  They build a Prototype, find investors and start to experiment with how to look into the future and how to relate to the present when the future is already written.  As the company matures and Ben and Adhi become wrapped up in what will happen, the question becomes:  Is it a good thing to know the inevitable result of a choice that has yet to be made?  Does know the future affect the present, or is the present just a reflection of future knowledge already obtained?
   Frey makes a really unique and fitting style choice in the writing of this novel.  Ben and Adhi use the Prototype to cultivate news from the future to inform them and Frey crafts the novel completely through a mix of news articles, interviews, and text messages conversations.  This style reflects the way the information is obtained from the future, constantly reminding the reader that reading these blurbs of information consistently fail to paint the whole picture.   But that challenge, to fill in the blanks on what is going on and how everyone feels, is exciting and entertaining for the reader to do.  I really like the ethical and legal challenges that Frey poses, along with a smattering of betrayal, loyalty (or lack thereof) and humbleness that all come out of this ability to know before you know. 
   I really enjoyed THE FUTURE IS YOURS and I would recommend it to anyone.  Its a fast and compelling read where the stakes get bigger and bigger until the breathtaking finale.
Was this review helpful?
I started this book thinking that I would not like it because of the style is written in. Normally I don't like books written in the form of memos and e mails. This book far exceeded my hopes. I loved it.  The paradoxes inherent in the idea of time travel are very well thought out.  Character development in this style of writing is very difficult but the author did a great job. You understand the characters and like or dislike them as you should.  I highly recommend this book!
Was this review helpful?
**5/5 Stars**

I’ll admit that I was going to put this down after the first few pages felt like it was yet another book about tech bros gone bad (or are they just all bad to begin with?!). But then I stuck with it for about 15 pages, and I was into it. And yes, I ended up giving this book a 5/5 stars rating despite my first few pages impression. Never judge a book by the first five pages!

What kept me reading Dan Frey’s The Future is Yours?

There are several things that kept me absolutely hooked to the point I read this in under 48 hours (and I have a busy schedule). For one, the structure of the book is just plain cool. I loved that most of the story is told via an archival, historical approach. The bulk of the book’s contents are texts, emails, newspaper articles, blogs, and a variety of other media. You would think the narrative would be hard to follow because of this piecemeal approach, but it isn’t. It’s actually insanely addicting.

Second, the premise of the book is interesting. I love how the genre of multiverses and time-travel is just exploding in recent years. It makes me feel like maybe we all just want to escape this world with all its problems and very real anxieties. This book is about two guys who meet at Stanford University (my alma mater, and yes, I loved the scenes involving campus and the dish for you insiders). Both characters are very flawed but motivated people. One character has a dream to engineer a machine that sees into the future. The other wants to market this concept and sell it to everyone to level the playing field when it comes to money and equality (or so he says).

If you love the story of Theranos (I loved the documentaries about the company and the book Bad Blood!), this book might be of great interest to you despite the fact it is fiction. Technology and innovation is moving at the speed of light in today’s world, but this book and the many sad stories of Silicon Valley’s start-up failures are really about the ethical and moral failures that arise due to technology. Just because you can invent a new technology doesn’t mean society is ready for it or even needs it at all. We need people in the humanities and social sciences thinking deeply about how new technologies will be used and implemented before they are rolled out. If this is a topic that interests you, I highly recommend reading Jaron Lanier’s books on social media and AI.

Thank you to the author, Dan Frey, the publisher, Random House, and NetGalley for the advance reviewer copy of The Future is Yours!
Was this review helpful?
The Future is Yours is told in the form of emails, texts, and congressional hearings. It’s about a company called The Future, and their wild invention that allows people to see one year into the future. 

The problem, of course, is that this comes with major problems for the main characters. Is it all worth it? That’s something you’re going to have to decide for yourself because the book has an ambiguous ending. 

A couple things to note: I read an ARC copy of this book, and the publisher will need to make a change. The book says RBG is still alive in 2021, but that’s sadly not the case. Also, there’s one thing that happens between A and Leila that’s never fully explained. A quick, one paragraph explanation would be great. Aside from these things, the book is a quick read and entertaining.
Was this review helpful?
Thanks to Netgalley and the publishers for this ARC. I must disclose straight off I am not a fan of Sci-Fi books though I keep trying! This was an interesting story told documentary style through news articles, texts and hearings. Two college buddies, Ben Boyce and Adhi Chaudry work together to create a company that will sell a machine that can see into the future. Adhi is the super genius who creates the machine and Ben has all the right skills to fundraise and market the idea. It was a brilliant plan only things begin to go wrong. The impact of their machine will be rock their friendship and society as a whole.
I would recommend to fans of Sci-fi, especially younger readers.
Was this review helpful?
This is a story about if we should do things just because we can.   

This book was a solidly enjoyable science fi trip, told in a mixed media epistolary format.  I initially didn’t know if I would feel connected to the characters, but I was pleasantly surprised.  I also love found it interesting that one character’s mental health was explored... but the blatant clinical presentation of the other was ignored- something that seemed like a purposeful nod to the way that society stigmatizes specific disorders, and reinforces others via perpetuating the traits that are deemed beneficial.   Unfortunately, I didn’t love the end as much as I loved the rest.  It made sense, and felt like a realistic conclusion... but I wanted more.   So, I’m now hoping for a sequel!

⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ 

Thanks Netgalley & Random House for the e-ARC!
Was this review helpful?