Crypto literature

monzer

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As in the world of cinema, digital currencies have entered and infiltrated literature through its wide window. Writers have capitalized on the rapid digital development to weave novels and stories that revolve around currencies, trading platforms, and the laws of profit and loss in the dark world of crypto. Writers have created a reasonable number of novels and stories in the last six years, and we will present some of those works below and focus on one of them as usual:

• The novel (Consensusland) is written by the American author Mark Helfman, a prominent writer and financial analyst specializing in Bitcoin, who worked as an aide in the US House of Representatives. It is a science fiction and economics novel first published in 2018.

• The novel (Bitcoin Bandits: A Cryptocurrency Thriller) is a tech thriller novel by American author Chris Kale, published in January 2023

• The novel (The Blockchain Affair: The Search for Satoshi Nakamoto) by American author Jonathan W. Clark, first published in 2020 in the United States, tells the story of the hacking of the popular cryptocurrency exchange platform (BitX) and the theft of billions of Bitcoin.

• The novel (The Blockchain Affair: The Search for Satoshi Nakamoto) by American author Jonathan W. Clark, first published in 2020 in the United States, tells the story of the hacking of the popular cryptocurrency exchange platform (BitX) and the theft of billions of Bitcoin.


• The novel (The Oracle) by author, computer scientist, and Cornell University professor Ari Juels was published in February 2024. An FBI agent enlists the help of a humble software developer working for a New York blockchain company to counter a mysterious extremist group that has released a rogue smart contract—a malicious, encrypted computer program—openly and independently on the blockchain. The contract offers huge cryptocurrency rewards to anyone who assassinates specific individuals, and the developer finds himself the next target. He and the agent embark on a frantic race against time to disable the program before the assassination can be carried out. Ultimately, the developer succeeds in finding a clever way to disable the deadly smart contract.

I hope you will have enough time to read one of these novels, and that you will gain many benefits and experiences from them.
 
That is a fascinating reading list. The Oracle especially sounds like a gripping, high-stakes thriller that perfectly captures the dark side of smart contracts.
 
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