Home » Book Review »Writing »WritingReading » Currently Reading:

The Fear Index by Robert Harris

May 8, 2012 Book Review, Writing, WritingReading 4 Comments

The Fear Index

From Dickens of two hundred years ago I jumped straight into a future thriller ‘The Fear Index’ by Robert Harris on Kindle e-reader. I also listened to the unabridged audio book version, narrated by Christian Rodska.

What I admire most about Robert Harris is the extensive research he does for each one of his books, whether set in the past historical Pompeii or in the port city Archangel in Russia or into the computer world.

The Fear Index reminded me Bill Gates’ talk of 1999 ‘Business at Speed of Thought’.
As I was considering these issues…a new concept came into my head: The digital nervous system. A digital nervous system consists of the digital process that enable a company to perceive and react to its environment, to sense competitive challenges and customer need and organize timely responses.’

The Fear Index: Dr. Alex Hoffman and Hugo Quarry are partners in an investment company in Geneva – Hoffman Investment Technologies. Alex, the physicist is the brains of the operation. He programs his smart computers to generate huge financial returns for their clients. Hugo Quarry, an Englishman, is the financier who takes care of the business side. The success of the company is due to the vast sums the investors are able to reap due to the company’s digitized programme, VIXAL-4’s calculations of the money market.

The operation moves along well allowing both men the means to enjoy expensive life styles. Alex pursues his hobby acquiring Antiquarian books. Being a paperless advocate he insists on a totally paperless office and so he keeps his antique book collection a secret. Alex’s wife is well provided for and is a high-powered artist who converts body scans into glass sculpture. Hugo follows an expensive decadent life-style with yachts, fast women, and faster cars.

Soon fear on fear mounts. The super computer develops a personality of its own. The artificial intelligence evolves its own algorithm and starts to work for itself. It begins to virtually stalk the creator. It rearranges Alex’s life dangerously. Alex receives the first edition of Charles Darwin’s The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals, with the bookmark on the page about fear. It appears he purchased and paid for it. The super computer takes over his life and his business. It begins to work on the financial market. The out-of-control computer disseminates information in nanoseconds and sends out ‘buy and sell’ messages. It creates price shifts that cause volatility and fear in the financial market. Neither Alex nor his team of computer experts is able to control the output of the VIXAL-4′s “brain”. Considerable tension builds up. The rest thrilling and nail-biting, and I am not revealing more.

The plot is riveting. One does not need knowledge of high technology or of hedge funds and stock markets to enjoy this thriller which is part sci-fi and part mystery. Yes, there is murder too. The ending leaves one imagining a sequel.

‘The Fear Index’ had me contemplating on our super technology assisted lives. Artificial intelligence has already taken over the many tasks we did for ourselves and much is now taken for granted. I am thinking about my own electronic future. Will computers move beyond my control?

Currently there are "4 comments" on this Article:

  1. Laura Besley says:

    I don’t think I’ve ever read anything by Robert Harris, but I’ve heard good things about his work. Another one to put on the to-read list!

  2. Don Ellis says:

    To answer your last question: I think computers have already moved beyond my control. Especially Macs, which don’t “just work.” LOL

    I enjoyed the book, too, thanks to your recommendation.

Comment on this Article:

Where to find my books


Click in this box and then click on links below ...

Worldwide -- paperback editions of both books
Nanadon Publishing

Hong Kong bookstores -- paperback editions
Cosmos Books, 30 Johnston Road, Wanchai
The Book Attic, 2 Elgin Street, Central

Amazon -- Kindle edition
Floating Petals
Bathing Elephants

India -- paperback editions at Comma365.com
Floating Petals
Bathing Elephants

Bathing Elephants



Paperback above.
E-book below.
Click either to see both.



Floating Petals



Paperback above.
E-book below.
Click either to see both.



RSS Recent posts

  • WALKING HOME by SIMON ARMITAGE
    Walking Home by Simon Armitage Walking Home the Pennine Way is not a book of poems from this famous poet but a personal account of Simon Armitage’s experience, walking one of the toughest climbs in Britain. He undertook this task, a walk that stretched about 256 miles, in the summer ... […]
  • SUPER SCOOPS
    Super Scoops Breaking News is breaking faster and getting chunkier. The sightings and the search for the brothers who carried out the Boston horrors is the latest example. BBC and CNN that I check everyday for news stopped the world and stayed on ‘live’ repetition, twenty-four hour, second by second ... […]
  • BEIJING ART VILLAGE 798
    798 Beijing Art Village Chinese contemporary art began to emerge in the early 70’s. Since then art zones have sprouted all over China, especially near large cities. The Blue Roof in Chengdu, Sichuan; The Stonehouse Art District in Chongching, Shanghai; and Art Village 798 in Chaoyang, Beijing are the better ... […]
  • JOSEPH ANTON – Book Review
    JOSEPH ANTON by Salman Rushdie On Valentine’s Day, 14 February 1989, Ayatollah Khomeini, the Supreme Leader of Iran, issued a fatwa against Salman Rushdie for his Satanic Verses. Rushdie called it his Unfunny Valentine. Twenty-three years later, in 2012, he published Joseph Anton, based on the journals he kept while ... […]
  • Dolls in the Wood
    Dolls in the wood I have always been fascinated about the energy around us. Where do our spoken words go after we have spoken? Where do our thoughts go after we have thought? I feel words and thoughts are all around us, moving in circles in the universe, a galaxy ... […]

Author Website

Personal Website

Recent Comments

  • Leela Panikar: Shona, thanks apt comments and your viewpoint. I know you to...
  • Shona Jhunjhnuwala: ( Note: my website is still not set up Sorry) Hey thi...
  • Leela Panikar: Thanks Don, I found one of the hardest to write. Spooks has ...
  • Leela Panikar: Ha, ha, how funny. Love your wit Indra. You are right, not y...
  • indra: I have not read the book, no intentions to, but can suggest ...