Directive 51 (novel)

Directive 51 is the title of a science fiction novel by John Barnes. It is the first of three books comprising the Daybreak series.

Directive 51
First edition
AuthorJohn Barnes
Cover artistCraig White
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesDaybreak
GenreScience fiction novel
PublisherAce Hardcover
Publication date
2010
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Followed byDaybreak Zero 

Plot

The title is a reference to Directive 51, the Presidential directive setting out government procedures in the event of a "catastrophic emergency".

The book follows a third-person perspective of Heather O'Grainne, a worker in the Office of Future Threat Assessment in the state of Washington. In the near future a variety of groups with diverse aims, but an overlapping desire to end modern technological society (the "Big System"), create a nanotech plague ("Daybreak") which both destroys petroleum-based fuels, rubber and plastics and eats away any metal conductors carrying electricity. An open question in the book is whether these groups, and their shared motivations, are coordinated by some conscious actor, or whether they are an emergent property / meme that attained a critical mass.

The Daybreak plague strikes, and world governments are helpless to deal with it. Industrial civilization rapidly breaks down, and tens of millions die in the U.S. alone (the global death toll measures in the billions). There is a presidential succession crisis. Just as society in the U.S. seems to start stabilizing, previously placed pure fusion weapons detonate, destroying Washington, D.C. and Chicago. This is followed by additional pure fusion weapon strikes, which are determined to be weapons that are being created on the Moon by nanotech replicators. A shadowy neofeudalist group (the "Castle movement") led by a reactionary billionaire may be inadvertent saviors of society ... or may have some deeper involvement in things.

gollark: Funlolz?
gollark: The new one is much better - it contains less code (if you ignore the giant cryptography libraries someone else wrote), can do partial updates, and can even cryptographically verify the updates to prevent tampering (probably).
gollark: The old updater thing actually used to just download files directly from pastebin every time it detected a change in one of them, but pastebin started being annoying and I decided I wanted stuff like version control.
gollark: Technically yes, but why?
gollark: Sadly, no, only OpenComputers can.

References


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