A Hungarian fatalist convinced that the human race is a blemish on God\'s otherwise perfect universe; a natural resource scientist who\'s discovered that we exhaust the earth\'s resources every eight days; an Ultimate Frisbee-playing man-child who\'s identified a fractal pattern embedded within all matter; a failing novelist desperate for the approval of those she despises; a paralyzed philosophy professor discovering that he can make things happen simply by wanting them badly enough; and a trio of vengeful, superintelligent robots locked in a hangar in South Korea, patiently waiting for some gullible human(s) to release them.
And once he has his team assembled, he just might-against all odds and his own expectations-be able to see his apocalyptic plan to fruition..
Because even if Laszlow is merely, as he claims, an agent of fate, he\'s the one driving this crazy machine.
This is a partial cast of Anthropica, a novel that puts Laszlow Katasztr fa\'s beautiful vision of a universe without us to the test.
A Hungarian fatalist convinced that the human race is a blemish on God\'s otherwise perfect universe; a natural resource scientist who\'s discovered that we exhaust the earth\'s resources every eight days; an Ultimate Frisbee-playing man-child who\'s identified a fractal pattern embedded within all matter; a failing novelist desperate for the approval of those she despises; a paralyzed philosophy professor discovering that he can make things happen simply by wanting them badly enough; and a trio of vengeful, superintelligent robots locked in a hangar in South Korea, patiently waiting for some gullible human(s) to release them