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Far-Reaching Impacts

Babette Ettridge Author Interview

The Pattern Maker follows a former astronaut now working at NASA’s Johnson Space Center whose colleagues claim they were passengers in a driverless SUV accident leading him to investigate more unsettling occurrences. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I have had a fascination with simulation theory for a long time, especially the work of philosophers, such as Rene Descartes and Nick Bostrom, and from watching shows like Ghost in the Shell and The Matrix. I knew I wanted to base a series of novels on this possibility but I needed another story element to cause a high-stakes thriller plot. This introduced the Pattern Maker because of course, there would be someone who would want to take advantage of changing the world to suit their plans. This book opens with how those changes may look to us as they are happening. I also needed some events that were going to make the fact that we live in a simulation believable to the characters.

I found the science in the novel to be well-developed. What kind of research did you do to make sure you got it all right?

I follow a lot of sites and feeds that cover the latest scientific discoveries and thinking, and this information triggers ideas about how I could bring them together in a plausible way. I then build in extra layers to develop the thriller aspect of the book. To ensure that the science I’m using, and the way I’m twisting it, could work, I refer to the work that researchers have kindly shared in formal papers and scientific journals.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

The premise of the whole series is that nature will repair itself, with a strong leaning toward Gaia theory, which suggests that the planet is self-regulating to sustain life. And, the more humans attempt to “fix” things, the worse they get. I also wanted to explore the idea of how rapidly we can now make changes to systems, at massive speeds, that can have such far-reaching impacts to all lifeforms.

Where does the story go in the next book and where do you see it going in the future?

The main plotline of the series is that by accessing and changing the simulation code, the Pattern Maker has introduced the Year 2038 problem. In a simplified nutshell, the year 2038 problem is a bug that may impact the way some computer systems store and represent time values from January 19, 2038, as they will run out of space to store dates. This could cause the computer to malfunction or stop working, or the calculation could overflow causing the system to think the date has looped and is back at the original start date of 1 January 1970, or the system could go into underflow and make the time value negative, and the system would think it was 13 December 1901. When we’re talking about computer systems, this is something that can (and is currently being) addressed. But when it happens to the simulation that we live in and are an integral part of there’s a range of extinction-level outcomes that could occur. To stop any of these disasters, the team attempts to make changes to the code but they need to somehow test their work. Using a new method of quantum time travel, Sam undertakes missions to throw his consciousness forward to the year 2040 to see if they have been successful. But a lot can happen in 18 years – not just to the world but to Sam’s life. And the Pattern Maker didn’t bow out gracefully, leaving a series of cipher blossoms, which bloom within the simulation code at the worst moments.

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We live in a simulation.

Its code has been breached.

Will a cyber zealot destroy our world?

The Pattern Maker is erasing their enemies by deleting their code. But this increase in data is moving the simulation toward a gravitational singularity when it will crush itself.

The only clues discovered by NASA and Homeland Security lead to the Sámi people of the Arctic. Their ancient understanding of physics may help stop the simulation overloading, while a realistic environment is developed to test reversing the changes.

Can they use an existing test model for this purpose?

Or will the Pattern Maker stop them in a deadly code battle?

The ancient role of Weaver introduces another person who can change the simulation but she can do it with her mind. Can the government task force build an alliance with her or do they have another enemy to defeat?

If you dig science fiction where reality is made surreal as it intersects with theoretical physics, this book is for you.

Author’s note:
Some readers have found this book to be quite a dense read due to its complexity. This is from hard science fiction themes, a non-linear narrative, and multiple points of view that deliver various pieces of the puzzle at different times.
If you don’t enjoy these elements of story-telling, you might want to give this book a miss.
Whatever you decide, happy reading to you!

The Pattern Maker

The Pattern Maker is a science fiction thriller set in 2024, primarily revolving around Commander Sam Perry, a former astronaut now working at NASA’s Johnson Space Center. The novel kicks off with a mysterious car accident involving Perry’s colleagues, who claim they were passengers in a driverless SUV. This puzzling event triggers a series of increasingly bizarre and unsettling occurrences. As Perry investigates, he uncovers a deeper conspiracy suggesting reality itself is a simulation manipulated by a shadowy figure known as the “Pattern Maker.” The book weaves science, technology, and philosophical speculation into a gripping story about the nature of existence and free will.

I found the writing to be sharp and engaging, with a lot of emotional intensity coming from Sam Perry’s inner monologues. The story’s pacing is fast, and the mix of technical NASA details with the eerie supernatural elements creates a unique blend of realism and sci-fi. Perry’s frustration as he navigates this convoluted reality felt authentic, especially when the surreal events started pushing him to the brink. In particular, the scene where he watches footage of a driver’s skeletal hand gripping a steering wheel is haunting, sticking in my mind long after I read it. I appreciated how the book didn’t rush through its central mystery but let the tension build as Perry pieced everything together.

Perry is the reluctant hero, drawn into a conspiracy beyond his control, and Kate Martin, one of his colleagues, serves to mostly introduce the central mystery. However, the mystery surrounding the “Pattern Maker” kept me hooked, especially as it became clear that this entity was erasing people from existence. The scene where Perry learns about his role in this cosmic manipulation sent chills down my spine. There’s something genuinely terrifying about the idea that reality can be undone like lines of code.

The Pattern Maker is a thought-provoking and eerie thriller that will appeal to fans of speculative fiction and those interested in the intersection of science and philosophy. While the book’s dense plot and technical details might not be for everyone, its suspense and exploration of reality’s fragility make it a compelling read. I’d recommend this to anyone who enjoys shows like Black Mirror or books like Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? If you love to question the nature of existence while being entertained by a gripping mystery, this one’s for you.

Pages: 293 | ASIN : B0DFTKJS7Q

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