The Plutonium Blonde Dramatized Adap..., Lawrence Ganem
The Plutonium Blonde Dramatized Adap..., Lawrence Ganem
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

Synopsis

I AM THE LAST FREE-LANCE PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR ON EARTH.

My name is Zachary Nixon Johnson. The year is 2057 and, after a handful of species-altering upheavals, Earth-shattering cataclysms, history-changing extraterrestrial contacts, and pop-culture disasters, the world is now a pretty safe place. But, of course, as in times past, people still run the shades-of-gray gamut from good to evil. There are still cops and robbers, saints and sinners, voters and politicians. And every once in a while some crazy thing happens that threatens all of society, all of humanity, even the entire space-time continuum.

And for some reason it always happens on my watch.

So when B. B. Starr, the ex-exotic dancer who is now the CEO of ExShell, the largest corporation on the planet, hires me for a particularly sensitive assignment, I naturally expect the worst. After all, B. B. Starr is one of the richest and most powerful people on Earth--why does she need me? But even with the help of HARV--my annoyingly precise holographic assistant, who's the most intelligent computer on Earth--implanted directly into my brain (don't ask), this assignment sounds like more than I can handle. For B. B. Starr wants me to locate and disable BB-2, an android replica of B. B. herself. An android with a plutonium core, 160 times stronger, 176 times more durable, 200 times faster, with senses far more acute, and a vastly higher IQ than normal carbon-based humans. How can I hope to find and deactivate a bad-attitude, hell-bent, nuclear-powered, super android that looks like an exotic dancer and might even be smarter than HARV?

Reviews

Goodreads review by Gavin on December 12, 2017

The Plutonium Blonde is John Zakour's parody of the sci-fi noir detective story. Zukour did actually get the balance right between the humour and the story. This is clearly a light-hearted book packed with a ton of humour but it never overwhelms the story itself which means this actually manages to......more

Goodreads review by Bryan on March 30, 2022

I've been having a hard time lately being motivated to read. I've got a stack of books next to the bed that I intend to read but starting any one of them sounded really hard. Skimming through my list of want to reads on Goodreads though, I stumbled across one of the John Zakour Nuclear Bombshell boo......more

Goodreads review by Joshua on February 28, 2009

OK, I saw one of the later books in this series on the shelf, thought it looked interesting . . . but still didn't buy it, mostly because it was pretty deep into the series. In fact it was so deep in the series that I sort of decided that I could let the series pass. Besides, it was SF and I mostly......more

Goodreads review by Ed on September 05, 2012

It's not often you find something that can be both an homage and at the same time almost a spoof of its source material but they pull it off here fantastically. Equal parts pulp detective, sci-fi and comedy, these books would make a perfect summer blockbuster...probably starring Will Smith. They read......more

Goodreads review by Katy on April 17, 2013

Please note: I read and reviewed this book in 2007. Just copying over review from Amazon. Overview and Synopsis: In the year 2057 the world is brand new - everything is New - New New York, New New Mexico (the state) as well as New Mexico (the country). Zachary Nixon Johnson is the last licensed priva......more