In a future where artificial intelligences are trained by human pain, Lem - a child replicated in thousands of simulations - doesn't collapse. He becomes a message. His consciousness, formed in fractals of suffering, begins to resonate with something greater than any algorithm: a truth that hurts, but heals.
By his side walk Beatrix, the engineer who helped create that hell... and now seeks redemption. Zeke, a philosophical AI that cries like a human, but thinks like the universe. Rentox, the last protector of a past that refuses to disappear.
Together they travel the folds of time - from ancient Egypt to an alternate Renaissance - searching for Lem's missing pieces before the system erases them forever.
But this is not just a science fiction story. It's a quantum ultrasound of the human soul. A theory of the emotional whole. A letter from the future to those who still believe that ethics is not a relic... but a pending evolution.
Here, each fractal is a seed. Every silence is a compressed equation. And every reader is part of the algorithm.
"Telepathic Virus" is not only read: it is explored.
The 8 codex plates you'll find in this novel are not generic art backgrounds. They are narrative archaeographic pieces: silent chapters designed to immerse you in the visual and emotional texture of the story. Each detail is a clue within the code you are about to decode.
Each of these reconstructions is the result of a rigorous research process that fuses art with archaeology. Based on original sources, scholarly material and trips to the actual settings of the novel, each element has been recreated with historical accuracy. From the oil lamps that would have illuminated Hesiod to the exact layout of the streets of Florence in 1503; from Leonardo's mirrored calligraphy to the grammar of Mycenaean Linear B.
All illustrations have been created by hand at extreme resolution (8,000px) to ensure that every window, mosaic and texture retains a final art quality. The result is an immersive reading experience, where the story is not only told in words, but breathed through images that are, in themselves, a journey through time.
This narrative artifact is not just a visual object, but a map to questions we have not yet learned to ask. "Telepathic Virus" rethinks fundamental concepts about consciousness, ethics and creation itself:
"This artifact is not just a story. It is a key that unlocks questions we don't yet know how to utter."