I know what you will do — A speculative thriller about dreams, AI, and the future

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Back to novels. The tireless mind of a veteran Supreme Court judge and former head of the court returns to writing with a new work—his fifth. The book dives into a future imagined and its consequences, a fiction centered on a superpower that is as valuable as it is perilous.

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The narrative follows an investigative judge who appears in dreams with details that later unfold in real life. What he envisions in his dreams are crimes that occur days afterward, until one dream reveals that he himself is destined to die. It is a lively, thought‑provoking novel that sustains momentum and a strong, driving plot.

It also presents a vision of how criminal investigations and policing might evolve with the help of artificial intelligence, drawing readers into the latest developments in technology and social change.

The author notes that the future can be foreseen, yet it is always susceptible to change. People repeatedly contemplate what lies ahead, experience uncertainty, and crave answers. This book adds a timely thread about artificial intelligence and its expanding capabilities. It even suggests that a fictional chemical product could enable AI to glimpse the future.

The fifth novel I know what you will do

In its initial release, the author experimented with a fresh marketing approach by publishing on a major online retailer. The idea came from a family member, who saw potential in the platform’s pricing model. The book is priced at €15.60 in print and €3.99 for the Kindle edition, spanning 323 pages.

a contrary opinion

The launch directly engages with themes from the author’s previous work, amber File, which introduces four characters who can travel back in time to amend past mistakes. The plot edges into science fiction territory as it explores whether changing the past can alter the present and the future, viewed from a perspective already lived through.

Across the author’s growing bibliography, this work joins a lineup that includes I will always want you for me, cross pairs, unspeakable evil, and Yellow File. Drawing on professional experience, the author also addresses psychological abuse, harassment, or sexual violence within these stories.

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