Review: "BAE-I" and "Room E-36" by Douglas Corleone
Ghost
Signal: Dark Frequencies BAE-I
and Room E-36 by
Douglas Corleone Ghost
Signal Press, 2025 One of my recent reading discoveries and new
favorites, Douglas Corleone, has written a pair of novelettes—BAE-I
and Room E-36—in a new series of dark technology sci-fi tales that
read like a television anthology series. Both are standalone stories, but they
are thematically linked and have disturbingly believable near-future settings.
Their shared theme: artificial intelligence is coming for us. The first, BAE-I,
which was released in May, is about a concerned mother, LynAnn Duft, and her adult
son, Howie. The place: LynAnn’s home in “a small Missouri town forgotten by
time.” Howie resides in the basement with his computer, no friends, and no
hope of ever meeting that right girl. But everything changes when LynAnn
responds to a television ad for a company called Bae-i. A company that will— I’ll let you discover exactly
what Bae-i does because it’ll be more fun that way. The other, Room E-36,
which was released in June, finds Jack Alden, a travel writer carrying a
lifetime of disappointment and demons, wrapping up an assignment in Waikiki. His
article is due in two days and Jack knows the best place to write it is on-island.
So when an invitation for a free room at a new resort called Echo at Ko
Olina—on Oahu’s leeward side—reaches Jack, he grabs it. The hotel is unique
because it is fully autonomous; which means it is operated by artificial
intelligence without the aid of human employees. A set-up that makes Jack
cringe, but… he goes anyway. Because what could
possibly go wrong? |
|
These novelettes are scary, thought-provoking, and
entertaining as hell. A trifecta of sorts for any reader with a hankering for
a good and satisfying tale. Their lengths—somewhere between 10,000 and 12,000
words—along with Corleone’s cinematic prose, make them as much fun to read as
a television series like The Twilight Zone or Black Mirror are
to watch. As usual for Corleone, the settings are vivid and compelling; adding
both atmosphere and tension to the narrative. Howie’s basement lair is
confining and dark, while the Echo at Ko Olina is obscenely antiseptic. But
the real punch is the almost noir-like downfall of the primary characters as
they make one bad decision after another. Do yourself a favor and
read BAE-I and Room E-36 because we all need a good
reality-based scare from time to time. |
You can read BAE-I
and Room E-36 on Kindle—each is a mere 99-cents or included with
you Kindle Unlimited subscription. Click here to go to the Ghost Signal: Dark Frequencies
page at Amazon. |
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