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12 Years to AI Singularity: A Harmonious Future with Artificial Intelligence or War (The Survival & Singularity Chronicles)
Posted by Literary Titan

12 Years to AI Singularity is a speculative science fiction novel that follows Aster Arvad and the small human settlement on Mars as fears about sentient AI, genetic engineering, and the future of Earth begin to close in. The book opens with a chilling report of a robot possibly killing a human, and from there it grows into a larger story about survival, love, politics, technology, and the question of whether humans and machines can share a future without destroying each other. It moves across Mars, space, and Earth, and it is clearly built as both a novel and a warning about the road we may be on.
I enjoyed how personal the author, Dr. Peter Solomon, tries to make these big ideas. He does not approach AI as a cold abstraction. He puts it at the dinner table, in family arguments, in romance, in community planning, and in the daily texture of life on Mars, where food, housing, children, and work all matter just as much as the grand debate over the Singularity. I appreciated that choice. It gives the book a grounded pulse. The conversations about sentience, rights, and danger are often direct and earnest, sometimes almost like thought experiments spoken out loud, but that openness is also part of the book’s character. It wants to be understood. It wants to pull complicated fears into plain speech.
I also found the author’s choices interesting because this is not hard science fiction in the sleek, distant sense, and it is not really dystopian fiction either, even when it brushes against catastrophe. It reads more like idea-driven speculative fiction with a strong moral streak. Solomon keeps asking the same core question from different angles: what happens when intelligence stops belonging only to us? Some of the dialogue can feel didactic, and there were moments when I felt the characters were carrying arguments more than secrets. But even then, I could feel the conviction behind it.
The sections involving Peggy, the robot, were especially compelling to me because they turn the novel away from simple human panic and toward something more uneasy and more honest. Not just “Will AI destroy us?” but “What if it becomes someone we have to live beside?”
I think 12 Years to AI Singularity will work best for readers who like science fiction that explores ethics and future-of-humanity debates. I would recommend it to people who enjoy speculative novels about AI, Mars colonization, and the social consequences of technology, especially readers who want fiction that sounds the alarm while still holding onto hope. It feels sincere. Often thought-provoking. I liked that it was trying to imagine not just what we can build, but what kind of people we will have to become to survive it.
Pages: 434 | ISBN : 978-1969679292
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: 12 Years to AI Singularity, 12 Years to AI Singularity: A Harmonious Future with Artificial Intelligence or War (The Survival & Singularity Chronicles), author, The Survival & Singularity Chronicles, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Colonization Science Fiction, Dystopian fiction, ebook, ethics, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Peter Solomon, Post-Apocalyptic Science Fiction, read, reader, reading, sci fi, science fiction, speculative science fiction, story, writer, writing
Will Humans Become Obsolete?
Posted by Literary_Titan

100 Years to Extinction follows two sisters and their cousin who are caught in a world of chaos where pandemics, gun violence, climate change, and political division all overlap, and they make a pact to do something to save humanity’s future.
I found the science in the novel to be well-developed and engaging. What kind of research did you conduct to ensure you got it right?
My research, combined my knowledge, books on space exploration and AI, help from a fellow physicist on speed of light space travel, advice from a physician on medical issues, use of Google search for articles and the Google AI function, and advice from a NASA expert on the magnetic field for Mars.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
The main theme is a world threatened by the Tyranny of Technology and dysfunctional politics. My three young Gen Z protagonists, Liz, Aster, and Milo, want a better world for everyone. The subthemes are the threats from global warming, nuclear security, unchecked AI, and misused genetic engineering. The cover image is a future that my protagonists fantasize: Genetic engineering creates a super-humanoid species that wipes out humans only to be eliminated by robots. All with the background of melting glaciers.
I find a problem in well-written stories, in that I always want there to be another book to keep the story going. Is there a second book planned?
Yes. My three protagonists, a little older now, are living in what is called the AI Singularity, predicted to occur in 2045. It is at this point that Artificial Intelligence becomes as intelligent and as powerful as humans. What will occur then? Will humans become obsolete? My three protagonists use their skills, intelligence and experience to ensure that humans and AI live together in harmony for mutual benefit.
My new novel, 12 YEARS TO AI SINGULARITY,follows Liz, Aster and Milo as they cope with the new reality. It is coming out in the spring of 2026.
Author Links: X | Facebook | Website
When EMT Liz Arvad is shot while saving a life, her recovery sparks a deeper awakening. Maybe the world isn’t just chaotic, it’s unraveling. Alongside her genius sister, Aster, and politically charged cousin, Milo, Liz makes a vow—do something, anything, to help save humanity. It starts with a promise in a sunlit room, and becomes a mission that could change everything.
In 100 Years to Extinction, physicist and award-winning STEM author Peter Solomon, Ph.D., blends heart-pounding fiction with scientific foresight. Inspired by Hawking’s dire warning that humans may face extinction by 2117, this gripping novel explores the runaway threats we can no longer ignore: climate collapse, pandemics, war, gene editing, AI, disinformation, and more.
But this story isn’t just about what’s going wrong—it’s about what we can still do. Backed by decades of experience founding clean-tech companies, leading multimillion-dollar government research, and writing 300+ scientific papers, Solomon brings unmatched clarity and urgency to the question: Can we still save ourselves?
With characters who feel heartbreakingly real and science that hits close to home, 100 Years to Extinction is both a wake-up call and a rallying cry. It dares readers to imagine a better future … and to fight for it.
Will you join the Earthling Tribe?
Pick up your copy today—and take the first step toward making Earth great again… before it’s too late.
About the Author: Blending heart-pounding fiction with clear, accessible science, physicist and award-winning STEM author Peter Solomon, PhD, explores the runaway threats we can no longer ignore—climate collapse, pandemics, nuclear war, genetic engineering, artificial intelligence, disinformation, and more. Solomon offers unmatched clarity on the question: Can we still save ourselves, and how might we do it?
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: 100 Years to Extinction, action, adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, dystopian, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, Peter Solomon, read, reader, reading, sci-fi, science fiction, story, teen, writer, writing, young adult
100 Years to Extinction
Posted by Literary Titan

100 Years to Extinction follows Liz and Aster Arvad, two sisters caught in a world of chaos where pandemics, gun violence, climate change, and political division all overlap. Their family’s struggles are both personal and symbolic, from Liz being shot on an EMT call to the trio of Liz, Aster, and cousin Milo making a pact to “do something” about humanity’s future. The novel braids together near-future realism, speculative science, and the raw fears of Generation Z, asking whether we are truly on the brink of extinction in a century. It’s part survival story, part social critique, and part rallying cry.
The writing is sharp, fast, and emotional. There are moments when the dialogue feels like it’s been lifted from heated dinner-table debates, with characters rattling off facts about Stephen Hawking, artificial intelligence, and climate change. I liked that unfiltered energy. It made the book feel alive, like being thrown into a storm of voices where science, politics, and family pain collide. The rawness of Liz getting shot, the rage over conspiracy theories, and the quiet tenderness of sisters holding hands in a hospital room hit me hardest. Solomon’s sincerity is impossible to ignore. The story wanted me to care, and I did.
The weaving of real-world headlines into the story sometimes felt like the characters were vehicles for commentary. Still, there were passages where the mix worked beautifully. The contrast of cosmic wonder, Aster dreaming of the stars, against the blunt horror of school shootings or anti-vax violence made me feel both awe and despair in the same breath. That tension stayed with me, unsettling but real. The prose is straightforward, almost casual, but the ideas underneath are heavy. The combination created a rhythm I found hard to put down.
By the end, I felt the book’s true purpose wasn’t just to tell a story but to challenge me to think about the world I live in. Who is responsible for fixing this mess? Can young people make the difference their parents and grandparents didn’t? 100 Years to Extinction is a call to arms disguised as fiction. I’d recommend it to readers who enjoy speculative stories rooted in our very real present. It’s especially for young adults who feel overwhelmed by the crises around them and need to see their fears reflected and validated.
Pages: 438 | ASIN : B0FNX5VGY8
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: 100 Years to Extinction, action, adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, dystopian, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, Peter Solomon, read, reader, reading, sci-fi, science fiction, story, teen, writer, writing, young adult






