Zero Day Code by John Birmingham - Chapter 1 by Audible Australia published on 2019-06-14T01:42:55Z Head to Audible to listen to the full audiobook when it releases on July 4 2019: audible.com.au/pd/Zero-Day-Code-Audiobook/B07T23C177 Every modern city has one week’s worth of food to feed itself. Then it will collapse. Cut off the resources to New York, Sydney, or even a mid-size metropolis, and millions will soon starve. In Zero Day Code we see those immense and open, hyper-complex, networked supercities of the new millennium die. And in the last moments we see their vengeance take form as all the best and worst traits of humanity bubble to the surface. Zero Day Code is set in a realistic near future with dwindling global food supplies under increasing pressure from worsening droughts, floods and extreme weather events. Written by prolific Australian writer John Birmingham, the thriller follows a handful of survivors from the first day of society’s descent into violent, uncertain futures. James, a consultant to the US National Security Council, is the first to suspect that the worldwide emergence of a crippling computer virus is actually a cover for something else - a devastating cyber-attack by China on the food distribution system of the United States. The attack is a bid for the Middle Kingdom to distract America as it seizes the food bowl of South East Asia and feeds its starving population. But Beijing has miscalculated. Follow the missions of an embittered activist chasing salvation, a single mum rescuing her child from a frantic San Francisco and an army veteran who has long retreated from society, as the world they knew crumbles around them. Please note: this audiobook contains mature content and listener discretion is advised. Genre Audiobooks Comment by Michael Barnes 54 or indeed if they start eating the rich, even longer 2019-06-25T21:32:38Z Comment by Michael Barnes 54 "Every modern city has one week’s worth of food to feed itself. Then it will collapse" though of course that relys on the population being static, if the population is reduced the food and water will last longer. 2019-06-17T21:52:56Z