Reviews

“The novel reads like an eccentric amalgam of Neuromancer and the Hunger Games, blending a great deal of detail on emerging technologies that is at times downright scary, with a tale of humanity struggling to come to terms with an unknown future.”New York Journal of Books

“A visionary new form of storytelling—a rollercoaster ride of science fiction blended with science fact.”—Damon Lindelof, writer/creator of LostStar Trek: Into Darkness, and Watchmen

Burn-In is a white-knuckle adventure into our maximum probability future. I found surprises on every page, with each startlingly real depiction of new technology and its human impact. This near-future was crafted by experts, and it shows.”—Daniel H. Wilson, New York Times bestselling author of Robopocalypse

“Good timing…Both escapist and relevant.”—Tom Standage, Editor at The Economist

“Their seamless blend of detailed research and rapid-fire storytelling make Singer and Cole the perfect tour guides for our world’s future conflicts.”—Max Brooks, New York Times bestselling author of World War Z and Devolution

“I’ve never written a book review before, but then again I’ve never had such an enjoyable discomfort in reading a book before…Because Burn-In is fiction, but for how long?”Foreign Policy

Burn-In will wake you up and shake you up. Just as they did in Ghost Fleet, Singer and Cole give us a vivid look-ahead into the near-future. Like the best science fiction, Burn-In is a human story, with great characters and a terrific plot that unfolds in a ‘just-beyond-tomorrow’ world of emerging technology. I whipped through the book, mesmerized by its glimpse into a future where intelligence—human, augmented, and artificial—all blend together in a continuous battle to understand what’s the real truth. So much to think about after reading it!”—Admiral John Richardson (ret.), former Chief of Naval Operations

“I loved it. A glimpse into the future that is entertaining, enlightening, and scary as hell. Burn-In is filled with enthralling characters and scenes, but also key real world issues and questions, which you’ll be thinking about long after you finish.”—Reid Hoffman, Founder of LinkedIn and Author of Blitzscaling

“Captivating and oftentimes brilliant…something that Asimov would have immediately recognized and approved…the perfect blend of science fiction and human drama.”US Military Academy (West Point) Modern War Institute

“A fun and insightful read. Sometimes you just want to read a book to enjoy, and other times you want to book to make you think. Every once in while you get to do both!…It is hard for fiction to keep up with reality these days, but it can help us visualize the potential futures ahead of us in a meaningful way that non-fiction cannot. Burn-In brilliantly uses near-future technology to ponder pressing matters of tech, politics, and the human relationship with our increasingly intelligent machines. Read it and you’ll not only be entertained, but better able to understand the flood of AI headlines without fear or fantasy. Burn-In is the rare techno-thriller that takes tech seriously!”—Garry Kasparov, Former World Chess Champion, author of Deep Thinking: Where Machine Intelligence Ends and Human Creativity Begins

“This perceptive near-future techno-thriller from Singer and Cole (Ghost Fleet) warns of the unintended consequences of rapid technologic change…Singer, a military strategist, and Cole, a defense industry reporter for the Wall Street Journal, have clearly done their research….For all the emphasis on high-tech fears, [though] the authors tell a very human story.”Publishers Weekly

“The book for our times”—Forbes

“A compulsively readable story that also brilliantly explains how our near-future world will look and work. Singer and Cole have woven a gripping detective yarn about a hunt for the terrorists of tomorrow, using the best research from the brightest minds of today.”—Peter Bergen, New York Times bestselling author of Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for bin Laden from 9/11 to Abbottabad

“Timely, prescient, and meticulously researched, Burn-In tells a deeply humane and nuanced story about our changing relationship with AI and warns of dangers to our free society all too few have started to grapple with. This is the near-future thriller you’ve been looking for: a captivating story filled with moving characters as well as profound insights.”—Ken Liu, author of The Grace of Kings and The Hidden Girl and Other Stories

“Fucking awesome…I am loving it.” —John Birmingham, author of Axis of Time series

“Burn-In is a fantastic, genre-defying work…While recognizable literary influences are palpable, like Isaac Asimov and William Gibson, Singer and Cole nevertheless are experimenting with a distinctive narrative. The text isn’t fully fiction nor non-fiction but an informative and entertaining blend of both.”Pando

“…Personal, possible, and realistic without feeling moralistic….Burn In is for leaders throughout the [Military] Services.”—Marine Corps Gazette

2021 Top Summer Fiction Read “One of the best ways to learn about the future is through fiction. Singer and Cole provide a glimpse not only of future technology but more importantly how such technology will be employed and impact intelligence, law enforcement, and national security operations more broadly. I am sure we will someday see variations of the technology and concepts described in this book.”War on the Rocks

“Burn-In will do more for defense experts’ understanding of this brave new world with literature than a thousand non-fiction assessments would have.” —War On The Rocks

“Perhaps the greatest strength of Burn In and this genre of “useful fiction” is that as much if not more so than presenting a political argument, it presents questions that both the public and practitioners alike should be asking (if they are not already).  In a readable novel with relatable characters, Singer and Cole prompt questions such as what it means to be human, how society should approach the ethics of AI and automation in both warfare and our everyday lives, and what limits should be placed on the collection of personal, private data.” H-Diplo | ISSF Review Essay

“Balancing the technicalities of how technology works and how it will impact us is a challenge. Burn-In, as a fast paced techno thriller, focuses on the latter exploring the human side of interacting in a world dominated by technology which often sees the human as the weak link.  And, like previous Singer novels, such as the excellent Ghost Fleet, the technologies explored often have links from the world we inhabit today.  It offers a thought provoking insight into what the world, and how we interact with it, could look like in the future.” The Wavell Room (British military)

“…close to perfecting the genre of educational and informative techno-thriller.”—Science

“Burn In is a fantastic, compelling, and authoritative look into the future – a future that is equal parts amazing and terrifying.  With Burn In, Peter Singer and August Cole establish themselves both as masters of the technothriller and as scientifically-grounded futurists. Woven into their riveting, page-turning tale of a brilliant FBI agent’s future hunt for a diabolically clever, tech-savvy criminal are important lessons about the extremely difficult issues that lie ahead surrounding the use of AI, robotics, augmented reality, and ubiquitous surveillance.  It is a terrific read!”—General David Petraeus (US Army, Ret.), former Commander of the Surge in Iraq, US Central Command, and Coalition Forces in Afghanistan and former Director of the CIA 

“It’s more than good—it’s fantastic…Smart, gripping, provocative—it’s the real deal.”—Joshua Geltzer, Former Senior Director for Counter Terrorism at the White House National Security Council,  Georgetown Law Professor, and Executive Editor of Just Security

“As I read the book, I was constantly drawing insights to today’s challenges and opportunities … Burn-In should be mandatory reading for the Defense Department.”—Lieutenant General Robert Ashley, US Army; Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency

“Fast moving and readable, and it explores important questions…” Foreign Affairs

“The world of the novel becomes so alive for the reader that it creates a sense of unease. So many of the scenarios depicted in the book seem to be unfolding in real time…Burn-In is incredibly relevant and should be read as a cautionary tale about the pressing need for societies to pay close attention to the technology now being developed.”Ploughshares

“The book, like the other noteworthy novel the two collaborated on, Ghost Fleet, meets its purpose skillfully. It is both lively, entertaining, and well-written as well as thought-provoking….[It] should be essential reading for anyone who looks out at the landscape today and sees clouds looming over the horizon.”CIMSEC

“That fascinating place where things have a real chance of becoming real…This book is very much like a nerd’s dream. It’s fantastic. I love the concept.” State Secrets

“In our world of fake news and misinformation, fact and fiction blend together in a disturbingly seamless fashion. Where Singer and Cole’s book is different is that it harnesses real-life trends in technology and weaves them into a fictitious and fast-paced storyline to warn us about the perils of our future.”—Times Higher Education Review

“It is Awesome. Highly recommend it.”—Defense One

“Well written, with clear, punchy prose, reminiscent of good Tom Clancy.”—The Forum

“Riveting and suspenseful…Everyone should read Burn In.”Council on Foreign Relations

Burn-In Gives us a Glimpse of the Near Future.  Are we ready? Timely and compelling as it is entertaining, Burn-In raises important issues and will provoke the necessary conversations that must happen about humanity and the future we want as we embrace technology at an ever-accelerating pace.” Cipher Brief

“It’s a very interesting book…It’s a future shock novel like Greg Bear’s “Slant,” where things are happening faster and faster. But its also a military thriller. I compare it to Tom Clancy.”Podside Picnic: Podcast on the Literature of the Fantastic

“A really entertaining read”Recorded Future-Inskit Weekly

“This book is so many things. It’s a great detective story. It’s fantastic thriller. It’s a great human drama.”OODA Loop

“It’s a story of human machine teaming, but like a buddy cop movie…It’s a glimpse into the future.”Defense One

“heart-pounding”—The Portalist

“issues framed within an excellent Sci-Fi story.”—British Army

“If I were to use [main character] FBI Special Agent Lara Keegan’s language suit I would say: Fucking Hell! Awesome! Bring it on!” Strategem

“Burn-In has everything you need to pass the pandemic time a little quicker… Equal parts release and escape for anybody who’s spent a little too much time at home over the past several months…If you’re stuck at home, it might as well be with a great book. Pick up Burn-In and you’ll find that your quarantine just got a whole lot more interesting.”We Are The Mighty

“Especially right now, when people are home and watching a lot of Netflix, reading a book is a good alternative, and this is a good one.”To The Point

“Burn-In” offers a buffet of challenging questions and troubling future quandaries. For those who seek a good story, it has it all: robot sidekicks, bearded military veterans gone rogue, and a technological showdown of biblical proportions set in the nation’s capital.”Military Times

“A chilling depiction of a not-so-distant future.”—Vice-Motherboard

Burn-In is a gripping, surprising and fascinating peek at a possible future, where sophisticated artificial intelligence, enabled by all-encompassing social media, hardens deep political divisions in an era of climate change and societal collapse. Imagine a lefty Tom Clancy novel with cyberpunk tropes and add footnotes—yes, footnotes.” —David Axe, Forbes

“Wrapped in this propulsive thriller is a fascinating analysis of our possible near-future, where promises of a techno-utopia veer into surveillance-state nightmare. Cole and Singer brilliantly and terrifyingly imagine a realistic intersection of terrorism, technology, and policing.”—Phil Klay, National Book Award–winning author of Redeployment

“If you are like me and appreciate a thoughtful exploration of the manifestly complex implications of imminent tech adoption in the national security arena, embedded in a compelling narrative, this book will be well worth your time.”The Strategist

“While the late Tom Clancy may have practically invented the genre, a new cohort of authors has inherited the responsibility of both attracting new readers to the style and satisfying longtime fans of classics such as The Hunt for Red October, Patriot Games, and Executive Orders. Authors P.W. Singer and August Cole have done precisely that with their newest book….Burn-In is a riveting technothriller that is not only highly entertaining but meticulously researched and presents a near-future state that is closer than you think. Its stunning attention to detail and seamless blend of fact and fiction make this book a MUST READ for summer 2020. P.W. Singer and August Cole have crafted the most believable world that I have read in the past decade.”In Military

“What Singer and Cole have done—as they also did in their earlier work “Ghost Fleet”—is invent a new form of predictive future nonfiction, masquerading as fiction…Burn-In” is a must-read both for any policy practitioner who asks what government and society will look like down the road and for the average American who wonders how to shape the future.”Lawfare

“Sci-fi remains one of the best ways to envision how new technology will shape the future, and “Burn-In” is the rare work of science fiction that has the solid grounding of nonfiction. The central conspiracy plot is Tom Clancy-level — in the best possible way — but what sets “Burn-In” apart is the deep research the authors used to build their near-future world, all of which is meticulously detailed in 26 pages of endnotes … The bottom line: If you want to understand how AI, robots and cyber terrorism could remake our world — and you don’t want to wade through hundreds of pages of scientific papers — “Burn-In” is the summer read for you.”Axios

“Burn-In = best quarantine read so far. Futuristic but so in the moment.”—General Tony Thomas, US Army ret. former commander of US Special Operations Command

“So good I almost don’t want my competitors reading it. Near-term prognostications extrapolated from today’s headlines and tomorrow’s technologies, psychologically astute protagonists…August Cole and Peter Singer and Cole KILL IT.  Better than Black Mirror.”—Joshe Wolfe, Forbes columnist and Director at Lux Capital, Shapeways, Strateos, Kallyope, CTRL-labs, and Variant

“With their latest work, the authors energetically carry on the tradition of this genre’s giants including Isaac Asimov (I, Robot) and Robert Heinlein (Starship Troopers), to name a few…Singer and Cole clearly understand how to make the unintelligible understandable, and in Burn-In they deliver the best of contemporary science fiction. Defense professionals, policy makers, and American citizens alike would do well to pick up a copy.”
Strategic Studies Quarterly

“August Cole and Peter Singer have done it again, with a searing look at the intersection of advanced technology, brutal domestic politics, and an utterly uncertain geopolitical future. This is a book that charts perfectly the dangerous course into which we sail—and, similar to medieval sailing charts, on the distant margins it says clearly: ‘there be monsters here.’ Buckle up for Burn-In.”—Admiral James Stavridis (ret.), former Supreme Allied Commander of NATO

“Don’t miss Burn-In! Singer and Cole have combined their expert knowledge of imminent technologies to create a riveting day-after-tomorrow thriller exploring our increasingly uneasy alliance with smart machines and the networked world that enables them. Burn-In captures the imagination, even as it takes a hard look at the challenges ahead.”—Linda Nagata, author of The Red trilogy and The Last Good Man

“I loved Burn-In so much that I’ve already read it twice. This suspenseful, forward-looking novel prophesizes titanic disruptions soon to come from the marriage of humanity and technology. Most of all, it provides a clear-eyed view of both the highs and lows of humanity’s rapid plunge into a world of AI, robotics, and other advanced tech, and the impact that will have on families, society, politics and security. Singer and Cole project the logical outcomes of today’s rapidly evolving technological revolution in ways that make Burn-In both heartening and terrifying—sometimes at the same time. This book will definitely make you think.”—Lt. General Edward Cardon (ret.), Former Commander, U. S. Army Cyber Command

“An absolutely gripping, adrenaline-charged read that we could not put down. But we found that the book’s greatest impact is after you do indeed put it down and reflect on what you have just read.”Real Clear Defense 

“Singer and Cole have done it again. Exciting, interesting, and disturbing, Burn-In shows how the inevitable evolution of AI and intelligent machines can and will change our world. There will be both good and bad in this onrushing future, and our entire society—not just our political leaders—will need to understand and confront it. So enjoy this great read, but at the same time consider its implications both for our daily lives and our humanity.”—General Robert Neller (USMC, ret.), 37th Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps

“A near-future SF thriller starring an FBI agent and one damn smart robot…lots of clever details…a great premise for a series…just keep those suckers away from Putin.”Kirkus Reviews

“Burn-In is a thought-provoking and philosophical summer blockbuster; it is Michael Bay meets Stephen Hawking, and it is fantastic.”Diplomatic Courier

“Meet Agent Lara Keegan, a new kind of hero who captures your attention in a thriller you won’t want to put down.”—Gayle Tzemach Lemmon, author of New York Times best-sellers The Dressmaker of Khair Khana and Ashley’s War

“Another winner from Singer and Cole. Burn-In is a great story and a well written mystery/adventure novel, but most importantly it provides a view of the world in which we will soon be living, where data, networks, remote sensing, autonomy, robotics, and AI are totally integrated into every aspect of our day to day lives. It explores that nexus between people and technology—our greatest challenge in living in this new world—and makes you stop and think, even as you become immersed in a great book.”—Admiral Michael S. Rogers (ret), Former Commander, U.S. Cyber Command; Former Director, National Security Agency

“Perceptive and exciting near-future thriller…Drawing on plentiful research (and heavily footnoted), the novel is strikingly well constructed. The authors are aiming for maximum believability, and they succeed: this story feels really feels like it could happen. Its characters are genuinely full-bodied and readers will totally buy into [this world].”Booklist

“Through the eyes of its heroine, Agent Lara Keegan, Burn In is a page-turning story that challenges us to consider the social and societal implications of the game-changing AI technologies that are just over the horizon, and how we as people relate to our mechanical creations. Authors Singer and Cole have once again brought the future into our present, bringing us the book we need to start wrapping our minds around the issues that will dominate our near future.”— Kathleen J. McInnis, author of The Heart of War: Misadventures in the Pentagon

“The only thing America has to fear is America itself. Cole and Singer are among the few willing to engage with the futuristic storytelling potential afforded by contemporary reality.”—Madeline Ashby, author of Company Town and co-author of How to Future 

Burn-In is a high octane (and carefully researched!) exploration of what could happen if America loses its edge at the forefront of the AI revolution.”—Jamie Metzl, futurist and bestselling author of Hacking Darwin: Genetic Engineering and the Future of Humanity

“A speculative work about a dark tomorrow, Burn-In brims with the vibrancy of real, layered human conflict. P.W. Singer and August Cole understand that stories of moral tribulation transcend space and time, and imbue this bold, splendid story with it. There’s more life and imagination in this novel about the robot future than most books of today will ever manage.”—Matt Gallagher, author of Empire City and Youngblood

Burn-In is a profound look into an all too believable future, brilliantly weaving together a moving narrative that challenges readers with its mix of robots, AI, and politics. The action is stirring, the characters are all too relatable, but it’s the questions about humanity that will leave their mark, burning their way into your brain and leaving you breathlessly wanting more.”—Peter Tieryas, author of Mecha Samurai Empire

“Superb long weekend, physically distanced read. Fast paced, educational, and thought provoking, Peter Singer and August Cole provide a fascinating glimpse of the near-future military, law enforcement, and societal challenges posed by the ongoing technological revolution.” —General Wayne Eyre, Commander of the Canadian Army

“The authors energetically carry on the tradition of this genre’s giants – Isaac Asimov (I, Robot) and Robert Heinlein (Starship Troopers) to name a few.  In this stirring encore to Ghost Fleet, however, they break new ground in their description of the nexus between human and robot.  Singer and Cole clearly use their own proximity to recent innovations in big tech to tell the story – and they succeed in doing so.  Burn-In puts the promise and peril of AI firmly in our grasp such that readers will undoubtedly ask their own questions about the future long after putting the book down…Singer and Cole clearly understand how to make the unintelligible understandable, and in Burn-In they deliver the best of contemporary science fiction.   Defense professionals, policymakers and American citizens alike would do well to pick up a copy.”  —Prism

“Very Entertaining. Such a page turner.”—CyberWire

“It’s not data, statistics, or system specifications but rather the story that allows us to connect with, and internalize, new information. Through stories we are able to comprehend and adapt to the evolving world around us and find a path forward toward an uncertain future. For military operators and planners bombarded by capability charts, risk assessments, and courses of action, the ability to delve through the noise and gain a true appreciation of the situation is vital to achieving mission success. Based upon research , Burn-In provides fictional interpretation (the story) of how new technologies and techniques might be used in the near future.

P. W. Singer and August Cole once again strike home with a novel that takes the myriad challenges posed by the information age and personalizes them. Burn-In distills emerging technologies into a narrative which allows for a greater appreciation of the new reality they bring, including the threats and opportunities they present. The storyline utilized by the authors allows the reader to open their minds to possible ways in which new technologies can be leveraged, a crucial capability for any professional military thinker. After all, as the main character Marine turned FBI agent Lara Keegan says “there’s no fighting change. We have to embrace it.”” (p. 68)—NATO JAPCC Journal

“Great Book. Excellent reading for these pandemic times.” —Sirius XM

 “Burn-In” has a great plot and really well-developed core characters you’ll come to care about. It will keep you reading, and make you think as well—which is its main goal.”—More Stable Union

“Educational and Entertaining.”—CyberLaw