Picks and Shovels

, #3

First Edition, 400 pages

English language

Published Feb. 18, 2025 by Tor Books.

ISBN:
978-1-250-86590-8
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
1457462468
(12 reviews)

*New York Times bestselling author Cory Doctorow returns to the world of Red Team Blues to bring us the origin story of Martin Hench and the most powerful new tool for crime ever invented: the personal computer.

The year is 1986. The city is San Francisco. Here, Martin Hench will invent the forensic accountant—what a bounty hunter is to people, he is to money—but for now he’s an MIT dropout odd-jobbing his way around a city still reeling from the invention of a revolutionary new technology that will change everything about crime forever, one we now take completely for granted.

When Marty finds himself hired by Silicon Valley PC startup Fidelity Computing to investigate a group of disgruntled ex-employees who’ve founded a competitor startup, he quickly realizes he’s on the wrong side. Marty ditches the greasy old guys running Fidelity Computing without a second thought, utterly infatuated with the electric …

1 edition

reviewed Picks and Shovels by Cory Doctorow (Martin Hench, #3)

Yet another great Martin Hench novel

This time we venture far into his past when he had just gotten his accounting degree and discovered Silicon Valley. A lot of Martin learning about who he is, who he wants to be, what and who he likes and how to be the person he wants to be. Fun side characters and interesting explorations of the startup bubble, San Francisco and interesting people along the way. Highly recommended if you’ve enjoyed the other ones. (And if you haven’t read them yet I STRONGLY recommend adding Red Team Blues to your reading list immediately!)

reviewed Picks and Shovels by Cory Doctorow (Martin Hench, #3)

Another Great Marty Hench Novel

Loved this book!!! Doctorow comes back strong in the latest installment of the Marty Hench series. This one is an origin story and it is great. Despite knowing how Marty turns out, the road is twisty and full of surprises. Filled with lots of stories of retro tech with fascinating detail, I devoured this book and hope to see more in this vein in the future.

reviewed Picks and Shovels by Cory Doctorow (Martin Hench, #3)

A Fun Story of Adversarial Interoperability and Crime

Doctorow is in fine form here, delivering a thrilling story set in the early days of personal computers. There's more emotional impact here than I expected, and the retro technology involved makes it a fascinating look at early hardware hacking.

reviewed Picks and Shovels by Cory Doctorow (Martin Hench, #3)

Nostalgic, fun, informative

I like reading different perspectives on my early tech experiences regardless, but wrapped in a good tech scam detective story it's pretty irresistible. The fact that it's all chillingly relevant to our current tech world makes this a fable for our times.

I chose to read the series in reverse, which makes the story chronological. Order doesn't seem too important.

reviewed Picks and Shovels by Cory Doctorow (Martin Hench, #3)

Martin Hench

No rating

I've been a fan of Cory Doctorow when Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom pulled my attention with its colorful spine and name as a teen. That was in 2005/2006, when "You" were the Time Person of the Year, and web 2.0 was ramping up. I thought Down and Out matched that optimism, especially with the whuffles and the social credit thing, and the fact the ebook was free and downloadable for anyone, and there was a network of people who would do audiobook recordings for free -- but maybe that was the rose-colored lens from the times. When I reread it as an adult in the post covid-times when the promise of the internet was long broken, the story felt different. Especially since Doctorow is the guy who invented the word "enshittification", which is the story of practically every website now. And he's as dismayed in the mire …

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Subjects

  • Fiction
  • Crime Fiction
  • Mystery
  • Suspense & Thrillers
  • Martin Hench (Fictitious character)
  • Accountants
  • Computers
  • Technology
  • Silicon Valley
  • San Francisco