(co-edited with Jennifer Brozek) What happens when time and technology change the definition of crime and punishment?
Science fiction often focuses on future technology without considering the society housing it. Social norms may change as tech changes — or not. What will criminals, investigators, judges, and juries look like in a complicated future of clones, uploaded intelligences, artificial brains, or body augmentation? What stories emerge when we acknowledge the possibilities of new laws, new police methods, and the birth of sentient Artificial Intelligence, as well as all the ways they can clash or combine?
The Reinvented Detective presents stories that complicate law and order as well as the concept of criminals, detectives, punishment, and justice for all by showing how shifting technology, the rise of sentient AIs, and shifting social attitudes may affect what is not only acceptable, but expected, within both real world and digital communities—and everything in-between. These stories reinvent detective and true crime tropes, recasting them for the 21st century, and above all, experimenting, astonishing, and entertaining.
Includes stories and poetry by Premee Mohammed, Harry Turtledove, Jane Yolen, Peter Clines, Lisa Morton, Rosemary Clarie Smith, and more!
Overall a wildly imaginative anthology.
I recommend this to fans of either science fiction or detective stories. I STRONGLY recommend this to readers that are fans of both genres.
An excellent collection of sci-fi detective stories
The Reinvented Detective is a must-read for fans of science fiction and mystery, as well as anyone curious about how technology will shape our society and morality in the years to come.
A very good anthology! This collection is the second in a series and the theme is detectives and crime in either science fiction or speculative fiction settings. I really enjoyed this so much and will seek out the prior book to read and look forward to the next in the series.
A thoroughly entertaining collection of (mostly) near future detective-stories, exploring the way crime detection and the justice system might evolve the coming century or two - taking in account new developments in AI, virtual reality, new classes emerging and so on.
Overall a wildly imaginative anthology.
I love anthologies but I've never really read one like this. The combination of mystery and science fiction works incredibly well and may now be one of my favorite genre mashes.
The Reinvented Detective is a must-read for fans of science fiction and mystery, as well as anyone curious about how technology will shape our society and morality in the years to come.
Take your classic detective story and twist it into a pretzel! Toss in AIs, augmented humans, a text-based murder mystery, talking mini-dino solving mysteries at a Best in Breed event. Now you are starting to get the concept of this title! The authors can play in multiple ways on the concept of the detective while putting their own spin on the various tropes associated with the detective story. There are partner stories, there are thrillers and the last story is very, very noir! The tome is a bit like a can of Pringles, you're likely to read more than one!
As a fan of dark crime novels and #ScienceFiction this was right up my alley...my badly lit alley on a smokey night...
(science fiction, flash story) Discretion was the company’s watchword, or so Tiffany had been assured by Maria, who lived two floors down and had done it three months ago. No one needed to know. The technician was a thin blond youth, the left half of their face a conservative faux-tribal tattoo medley, almost retro, dressed in a bland-patterned coverall. They carried a slim silver box, briefcase shaped and sized, the handle set on one of the smaller sides.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. This site is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.