Clean Switch
Electric Cognition, Book 1
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Narrated by:
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Joshua Story
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Katherine Grant-Suttie
What happens when you can change personalities like clothing?
In the city of Klade, where corporations script the weather and edit memory like code, a nameless runner called Hikari lives in engineered bodies and borrowed personas. Forge is a battlefield juggernaut, Velvet is charm sharpened into a weapon, Wisp is a small-frame hacker with teeth, and Scout is the boy who slips through crowds unseen. Hikari refuses to speak the life that came before, the night they escaped Orinox and stole a combat shell to erase the child they once were. Jobs keep the lights on, but a ghost called Mirror keeps appearing in surveillance bloom, and an Orinox infiltrator named Sable keeps turning up where Hikari least expects.
When Wren, a sharp newcomer with a crow-eyed drone named Juno, falls into the life on an initiation run, she becomes the one person Hikari cannot quite keep at arm’s length. A convoy heist against Light Technologies exposes a flaw in Hikari’s code, a glitch that snaps them between bodies at the worst possible moment, and forces Wren to crack open a ribbed chassis and restart the person inside. Fragility becomes truth. Trust becomes a habit. As Hikari and Wren chase stolen data that points back to Orinox black projects and the Nyx Protocol, the pair must outpace Mirror’s hunts, Sable’s traps, and the city itself. Identity is a weapon here. So is loyalty. Only one will hold when the masks fall.
©2025 Gabriella Creighton (P)2026 Gabriella CreightonPeople who viewed this also viewed...
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The world building is sharp without being overwhelming. Klade feels alive in that uneasy way where everything is controlled but still somehow unstable. Memory edits, corporate power, surveillance everywhere, it all blends into a setting that feels a little too believable for comfort.
What really pulled me in was the dynamic between Hikari and Wren. It doesn’t rush into anything dramatic. Instead, it builds through moments where trust slowly forms, even when both of them have reasons to hold back. That connection gives the story a grounded core, especially when everything else starts glitching, literally and emotionally.
The narration works well with the tone. There’s a steady rhythm to it that fits the story’s tension and movement. You can follow each identity shift without getting lost, which honestly could have been a mess in the wrong hands.
By the time things start unraveling with the Nyx Protocol and the deeper layers of Hikari’s past, it stops being just a cool concept and turns into something more reflective about identity and choice. It sticks with you longer than expected.
If you like sci fi that balances action with something a little more thoughtful, this one actually delivers instead of just pretending to be deep.
Identity Hits Hard in This One
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Time to save the day
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looking forward to next one!
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From the opening breath, Klade feels alive in that unsettling, corporate-controlled way, where even the weather isn’t yours, and memory is just another system waiting to be rewritten. Hikari is a compelling lead, fractured yet precise, shifting between bodies like tools in a kit—Forge, Velvet, Wisp, Scout, each one more than a disguise, each one a question about what’s left underneath.
What elevates this above the usual genre noise is restraint. It doesn’t drown you in exposition. It trusts you to keep up. The writing is tight, deliberate, and carries a quiet confidence that mirrors the world it builds.
The relationship between Hikari and Wren is where the story finds its pulse. Not sentimental, not forced, earned. In a world built on masks and manipulation, their growing trust feels like the only honest thing left standing. And that makes every threat, Mirror, Sable, Orinox—hit harder.
There’s a philosophical edge running beneath it all. Identity isn’t just explored, it’s dissected. What are you when your body is interchangeable? When your past is something you actively erased? When loyalty itself becomes a liability?
This isn’t light reading. It demands attention. But if you’re willing to lean in, it delivers something rare, cyberpunk with substance, tension, and a clear sense of purpose.
A precise, controlled, and quietly powerful piece of storytelling.
Sharp, Stylish, and Unnervingly Intelligent
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Code, masks and survival in a Cyberpunk World
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