Książka Paper Empires Davis Shyaka Musirikare

Paper Empires

Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Dostępność: Zapowiedź
Wydanie 10. 07. 2026
72.37
Billionaire entrepreneur Cassian Rho built the world's skeleton-the bridges, power grids, and dams t...

Informacje o książce

Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
200
EAN
9798233089114
Enbook ID
53215588
Waga
215
Wymiary
133 x 203 x 12

Pełny opis

Billionaire entrepreneur Cassian Rho built the world's skeleton-the bridges, power grids, and dams that keep society running. He believed that ownership was the ultimate certainty. He was wrong.

In a single morning, every legal record of Cassian's existence is erased. Not just from one bank, but from every independent database, tax archive, and corporate registry on the planet. He hasn't been robbed; he has been un-indexed. His companies still operate and his towers still stand, but he can no longer prove he owns a single brick. Within hours, he is locked out of his own life, a "residual file" in a global system that no longer recognizes his name.

As financial institutions freeze his accounts and rival conglomerates move in like vultures to claim his "abandoned" assets, Cassian becomes a fugitive in a reality being edited in real-time. Joined by a disgraced journalist and a brilliant corporate litigator, he uncovers a terrifying conspiracy known as The Consortium-a shadow group using a "Consensus Engine" to redistribute global power by manipulating the very fabric of truth.

From the high-stakes boardrooms of the city to a secret subterranean vault hidden beneath the foundations of a massive hydro-electric dam, Cassian must fight to recover the "Ground Truth." But in a world where ownership is just a shared hallucination and history is written in disappearing ink, how do you reclaim a life that has been deleted?

Paper Empires is a cinematic, fast-paced corporate thriller that explores the fragile line between data and reality. It is a story about what remains when the ledgers are burned and the only thing left to trust is the weight of what you can hold in your own hands.