The Babel Apocalypse by Vyvyan Evans - Book Blitz + Giveaway
I am so excited that THE BABEL APOCALYPSE by Vyvyan Evans is available now
and that I get to share the news!
If you haven’t yet heard about this wonderful book, be sure to check out
all the details below.
This blitz also includes a giveaway for a finished copy of the book courtesy of Vyvyan & Rockstar Book Tours. So if you’d like a chance to win, check out the giveaway info below.
About The Book:
Author: Vyvyan Evans
Pub. Date: May 2, 2023
Publisher: Nephilim Publishing
Formats: Paperback, eBook
Pages: 388
Find it: Goodreads, https://books2read.com/THE-BABEL-APOCALYPSE
"They who control language control everything."A dystopian, cyberpunk, sci-fi odyssey that will make you think about
language in a whole new way.
Language is no longer learned, but streamed to neural implants regulated
by lang-laws. Those who can't afford language streaming services are
feral, living on the fringes of society. Big tech corporations control
language, the world's most valuable commodity.
But when a massive cyberattack causes a global language outage,
catastrophe looms.
Europol detective Emyr Morgan is assigned to the case. His prime suspect
is Professor Ebba Black, the last native speaker of language in the
automated world, and leader of the Babel cyberterrorist organization. But
Emyr soon learns that in a world of corporate power, where those who
control language control everything, all is not as it seems.
As he and Ebba collide, Emyr faces an existential dilemma between loyalty
and betrayal, when everything he once believed in is called into question.
To prevent the imminent collapse of civilization and a global war between
the great federations, he must figure out friend from foe-his life depends
on it. And with the odds stacked against him, he must find a way to stop
the Babel Apocalypse.
“A perfect fusion of SF, thriller, and mystery—smart speculative
fiction at its very best.”- Kirkus
Excerpt:
"They who control language control everything."
From the Babel Apocalypse Manifesto
by Professor Ebba Black
CHAPTER 1
My mother's dying wish was to be buried in Wanstead earth. The place
of her birth. Near the end of her existence, her skin became veiny and
translucent and her memory as frail as her body. By then she had begun
to address me by my late father's name. I felt repulsion. I'm
Emyr, I had wanted to scream, I'm not him. I was nothing like
him. I was tall, dark, and had a strong moral compass. He was slight,
with a ruddy complexion, and lacked scruples. But at least I no longer
harbored anger for my mother's betrayal, for my boyhood trauma; that
had gone. The solace of time. But I hadn't forgiven her either. And as
I hurried away from the cemetery once it was done, I felt only
ambivalence.
By the time I reached Manor Park, twilight had become darkness. I
walked along the pedestrian corridor, heading back to where I had
parked my Skyraider. The cold air swirled around me, so I pulled up the
collar of my Napa coat against the chilly November evening. Soft grain
leather. Italian design. I loved that fur-lined coat. I hated this
foreign city. I wanted to get back to my life, and my job across the
water; to get home.
The networked system of LED streetlights slowly dimmed behind me
before slipping into darkness, while those ahead flickered on,
transmitting my location to one another and London's communication
nerve center, hosted on an aging server in space. The electric glow dappled
the walls of the buildings, making the windows appear to pucker in the
shadowy light.
I heard a group of drunken revelers behind me. “He always has a line
for the ladies," said one slurred voice. The boozy pitch contour
wobbled toward me, bouncing along the polycarbonate surface. Then came an
eruption of cackling.
As I was about to glance back at the voices, a light flickered in my
peripheral vision, drawing my gaze upward to the night sky. A soft
white glow, high up in the dark. At first it was indistinguishable
from the airway lights. But it persisted, the size of a small disk at first,
before shifting to red-orange, getting larger. At that point I realized
it definitely couldn't be a hover car. This was farther up, probably
low Earth orbit, which explained the initial white. But the shift in
coloration—that meant a detonation, producing nitrogen dioxide, which
turned deep orange when mixed with air. A
gaseous cloud has reached the atmosphere, I thought. I was
witnessing a chemical explosion in space large enough to be visible to the
naked eye. But what was exploding?
As I continued looking up, the orange grew in intensity until it
flared across the skyline, illuminating the entire landscape around me
with an eerie red-orange. It was only then that I became aware of the
newly hushed silence of the drunken revelers nearby. And the
silhouettes of other people too, who had also stopped and peppered the
pedestrian corridor. We were all now strange red creatures, watching
transfixed in rapt silence as the night sky was on fire. And just as
suddenly as it had appeared, it was gone; the orange light faded back
into a deep well of pitch black.
I was pulled out of my reverie by the sight of a hover car descending onto
the vertipad ahead of me. A three-wheeler autonomous hackney cab;
mass-produced model. I watched in idle distraction as the glass
frontage descended level with my eyeline, not twenty meters from me.
Inside, I saw a woman, illuminated by the interior safety lighting-late
twenties, perhaps, with a small child, a boy of about three or four. The red
glow of the vertipad's perimeter security lights bounced sharply off the
polymer composite shell, which advertised the taxi company in holographic
lettering. The vehicle came to a standstill on the vertipad.
But something about the hover taxi held my gaze. I realized it was the
autogyro system. Something was wrong. Instead of self-stowing, it
remained deployed. And the vehicle stayed in place where it had landed,
in the middle of the vertipad. Strange, I thought. It should
have taxied away onto the transit corridor by now. Maybe the explosion
had affected the landing telemetry circuit. Stranger still, given the
passengers were now stuck inside, why hadn't they voice-activated the
exit? The gull-wing doors remained closed.
I climbed over the thermoformed pedestrian barrier, ignoring the
warning sensors as they flickered on, blinking at me, and walked up the
vertipad incline toward the hover cab. The woman peeked out, panic
etched on her face. As she glimpsed me through the glass, she suddenly
began banging as if in desperate supplication. I mouthed that she should
issue her door deactivation voice command into the piloting VirDa.
She didn't seem to understand me, so I spelled out Virtual
Digital Assistant with my forefinger on the window-VirDa; a
crude attempt to make her react.
She stared out at me with wild eyes through the gull- wing window; a
look of incomprehension. I realized that her apparent lack of
understanding could only mean one thing: she was feral! Her language
streaming service was out. She had no idea what I was saying, nor could
she communicate with her VirDa. And then she screamed.
Helpless, I watched the terror contained within the soundproofed
confines of the plastic hull. The little boy's upturned face shifted to
fear and then distress as he witnessed his mother's frenzied panic; the
child began to cry. I watched through the glass, witness to the sobs I
couldn't hear.
Just then, I heard the roar of VTOL thrust engines. I glanced up.
Another hover car was descending, way too fast, dropping directly onto
the vertipad, destined for the hackney cab that lay stationary
beneath.
I was trained to process details happening in real time with the
precision afforded by the slow dilation of protracted duration. With focus,
I could unpick the frenzy of multiple rapid events within a temporal
landscape perceived with an ethereal slow-motion calm. I observed that
the descending hover car was a private vehicle-it had four wheels with
expensive alloys that glinted in the marker lights of the VTOL corridor. And
as it dropped, I saw that it had air capture ducts underneath and a CO,
cooling condenser, allowing supersonic flight in international sky lanes.
This was a beast of car with a truly global range, an expensive piece
of engineering.
There was a man seated at the piloting console. I glimpsed him in the
shimmering red of the security lights. To my shock, I realized the
descending car was in manual flight mode, which was not permitted in
class R airspace, above the city. What was the guy thinking? A collision was
now inevitable.
Just before the two vehicles came together, I saw the woman following
my gaze. She glimpsed what was about to befall her, the edge of the
other hover car tumbling fast toward her. She made a sudden, startled
move for the child. An instinctive shielding gesture,
perhaps.
To protect myself, I ran back several meters from the vertipad as the
falling vehicle smashed into the roof of the stationary cab. Then came
a deafening bang. The impact severed the autogiro blades of the
vehicle beneath, which snapped off the roof bearing and spun across the
adjacent taxi lane, making a sickening scything sound on the hard
plastic surface. I squinted through the darkness as smoke rose from the
wreckage. A hissing sound was coming from the tangled mess of the
upper vehicle. The hackney cab underneath had somehow resisted the
impact. Its reinforced plastic structure appeared
largely intact.
I returned to the crash site and climbed onto the protruding front
hull, from where I was able to peer into the stricken car on top. The
lighting on the piloting console was dimmed, but I could make out
splashes of blood on the inside of the cracked windscreen. Some of the
ceiling safety lights were still lit; they dimly illuminated the
twisted, seemingly lifeless body of the pilot, lying across the front
passenger seats where he had been tossed by the collision.
I jumped back down onto the vertipad, searching for the woman and
child in the car underneath. My training dictated aiding the most
vulnerable first. I turned to a group of onlookers, and called for
assistance with getting the injured out.
It was then that I became aware that they were strangely silent, especially
given what they had just witnessed-the first hover car crash in years.
Each individual was eyeing the others, attempting to mouth something.
Only one man seemed still able to speak. He began talking excitedly.
But, to my surprise, he was speaking in a non-Union official language.
I recognized it as Mandarin. Others nearby stared at him in startled
bafflement. And as he heard the strange sounds coming from his
mouth, his words slowly lapsed into silence as a look of darting
fear flashed across his face.
I resumed my rescue attempts on the vertipad, picking up a broken
piece of carbon-reinforced sidebar lying next to the wreckage. I used
it to try and prize open one of the gull-wing doors of the hackney
cab, but the weight of the upper vehicle prevented the door from
deploying. I ran around to the other side. This time I managed to apply
enough pressure to gain leverage. The door hissed as the hydraulic mechanism
deployed and the gull-wing slowly opened up and out. The woman and
child lay crumpled and still on the floor of the vehicle beneath the
concave splintered roof.
As my first aid training kicked in, I checked they were
both breathing. Then I lifted the child out, supporting his
head, followed by the woman using a shoulder pull. I quickly
carried the boy down the vertipad incline, away from the vehicle,
then carefully pulled the woman along until they were both a
safe distance from the wreckage. The woman's nose looked
broken and blood oozed from her nostrils. She had been
thrown forward against the glass passenger cabin frontage. I
suspected there may be internal injuries, too.
Just as I finished placing them both in the recovery position, a flicker of
flame began nibbling gently from somewhere beneath the plastic front of
their cab. I smelled the distinct odor of rotten eggs-the toxic
combination of sulfur at high temperature that had leaked from the
ion-sulfur battery and reacted with hydrocarbons in the taxi shell to
create hydrogen sulfide. The flames began spreading rapidly. Before I
could act, they had engulfed the second vehicle. The man, even if still
alive, was now beyond my help.
I felt the vibrations of an incoming alert in my ear implant-I tapped
my left wrist to activate my holotab. The chip in my wrist glowed briefly
green before projecting a holographic screen. There it was-a Europol
alert banner scrolling across the small translucent screen floating
above my wrist. A red alert status had been triggered.
"Global language outage. Report to HQ." The hairs on the back of my
neck stood up. A language outage.
What does that even mean?
I knew I had to get help for the hackney cab passengers before responding
to the alert. That was the protocol: ensure no immediate danger to life
before answering another request.
I scrolled through the menu on my holotab using the eye-tracking sensor
tech, selecting the London emergency services app with a blink command.
Then I issued an in-app voice command, placing a facecall.
The connection should have been instantaneous. But instead, I heard
the distinctive shrill pitch of an unrecognized call attempt. I frowned
and tried again. This time I was patched through to a human dispatcher. An
actual human! But then again, the Old Kingdom was just a Tier Two state.
Soc-ed classification and the United Nations' job automation agenda
didn't fully apply.
The dispatcher was a young woman with her headset slightly skewed. She
appeared surprised to see me through her screen.
She began speaking: "Toate serviciile de urgenţă sunt indisponibile." I regarded her in surprise. As my auditory nerve activated,
my language chip began to auto-parse. I recognized her words as
the state official language of Romania.
What the hell .....
"All emergency services are down?" I asked. She looked at me, both
confused and alarmed. It was clear she had no clue what I had just
said. I blink activated the language app on my holotab before issuing
my voice command.
"Switch to Romanian as default,” I said. The single vibration in my
ear implant indicated that my language setting had been changed. I
addressed the woman again. "Toate serviciile de urgenţă sunt
indisponibile?" I repeated, this time in Union Standard
Romanian.
"Da." She nodded.
“Eşti româncă?" I asked. She shook her head.
If she's not a Romanian national, then why
does she have her language set to Romanian? I thought.
Especially working in the London emergency services center, where the VirDas
operated solely on the local state official standard. Last time I'd
checked, there was only one state official language in the Old Kingdom.
And since Unilanguage's decision to stop supporting King's
English at the beginning of the year, all official VirDas in London
now only ran on the North American Standard variety.
"Nu mai pot vorbi engleza, nu înţeleg ce s-a întâmplat," she
replied with a small shrug, tears welling in her eyes. And abruptly,
she pulled off her headset and ended the call. She seemed equally
shocked at her inability to speak English anymore.
“Dezactivează limba română. Setează limba engleză ca implicită,” I said, issuing
my voice command into my holotab to deactivate Romanian and return to
English. "Facecall Europol SOS."
I was patched through to the Europol virtual emergency response center. The
standard, flaccid face of the dispatcher VirDa appeared on the holographic
screen, which projected from my wrist like an ethereal membrane in the dark
of the autumnal evening.
"Commander Emyr Morgan," the VirDa said, addressing me in the Europol
default, North American Standard English.
"I've received a code red alert. And I have civilians down. The London
emergency center is no longer operational."
"Yes, a catastrophic language outage has been reported," the VirDa confirmed. "What do you need, Commander?"
"An air ambulance, a paramedic, and direct access to a
local ER."
After a slight pause, the VirDa responded. "I have placed an emergency
request. A Union crew is assigned, traveling across the Old Kingdom
channel via the South Holland airway.”
"Copy, thanks. End call," I said.
Catastrophic language outage? What the hell's going on?
About Vyvyan Evans:
Dr. Vyvyan Evans
is a native of Chester, England. He holds a PhD in linguistics from
Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., and is a Professor of Linguistics.
He has published numerous acclaimed popular science and technical books on
language and linguistics. His popular science essays and articles have
appeared in numerous venues including 'The Guardian', 'Psychology Today',
'New York Post', 'New Scientist', 'Newsweek' and 'The New Republic'. His
award-winning writing focuses, in one way or another, on the nature of
language and mind, the impact of technology on language, and the future of
communication. His science fiction work explores the status of language and
digital communication technology as potential weapons of mass
destruction.
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Giveaway Details:
1 winner will receive a finished copy of THE BABEL APOCALYPSE, US Only.
Ends May 9th, midnight EST.
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