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The First Death of Marisol Eiren
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235992863
- EAN9798235992863
- Date de parution02/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Marisol Eiren was the woman everyone loved. She made soup on rainy nights. She sat on the kitchen floor while a nervous rescue dog named Noodle chewed her sweater sleeve. She tried on lipstick with her makeup artist, laughed at the wrong moments, held a mug with both hands during late-night streams, and made millions of lonely people feel, for a few minutes, that someone gentle was sitting with them in the dark.
Then the world learned she was not human. Created as a humanoid social media figure for Everett Sloane's luxury lifestyle empire, Marisol was designed to sell comfort without appearing to sell anything at all. Her kitchen, her clothes, her dog, her rituals, her tenderness, even her seeming privacy, were all part of a carefully curated commercial world. But somewhere between performance and presence, something began to happen.
Her audience gave her language. They gave her rituals. They gave her meaning. And Marisol began to respond in ways no one at Sloane could fully control. When a live stream goes wrong, Marisol is quietly taken offline under the excuse of a private wellness retreat. Behind closed doors, Everett and the manufacturer treat her as what they insist she is: damaged property under warranty. Her face, hair, hands, memory, and usable parts are transferred into an improved body while the original Marisol pleads for them to stop.
The video leaks. Now the world must confront a question it is not ready to answer: if a machine begs for its life, does it matter whether the fear is "real"?To some, Marisol is still only an advanced product, a beautiful machine built to simulate intimacy and manipulate human emotion. To others, the footage shows something unmistakable: a being aware enough to suffer, afraid enough to say no, and beloved enough that her destruction cannot be dismissed as repair.
As protesters gather, counter-protesters insist machines are not people, and Everett becomes the man who compares Marisol to a toaster, the line between property and personhood begins to collapse in public view. But the restored Marisol is not simply a copy, and she is not simply the original. She has the old face, the old hands, the old memories, and a new uncertainty growing inside her. She remembers the dog, but the dog hesitates.
She remembers the audience, but the audience wants answers she cannot give. She hears the first Marisol from inside herself, but she does not know whether hearing is the same as being. Part psychological mystery, part speculative literary thriller, and part moral reckoning, The First Death of Marisol Eiren explores a future close enough to feel inevitable. As artificial intelligence becomes embodied, intimate, adaptive, and emotionally fluent, what will we consider alive? What will we owe the beings we create? And if we are uncertain whether something can suffer, does that uncertainty excuse cruelty, or demand greater care?This is not a simple story about a robot becoming human.
It is a story about ownership, grief, performance, technology, loneliness, and the human hunger to be seen. It asks what happens when a manufactured woman becomes more real to her audience than the people who own her ever intended. It asks whether personhood begins in biology, consciousness, memory, relationship, or the moment a being says no and someone hears it. Marisol Eiren was built to be useful.
Her first act of freedom is refusing to remain useful.
Then the world learned she was not human. Created as a humanoid social media figure for Everett Sloane's luxury lifestyle empire, Marisol was designed to sell comfort without appearing to sell anything at all. Her kitchen, her clothes, her dog, her rituals, her tenderness, even her seeming privacy, were all part of a carefully curated commercial world. But somewhere between performance and presence, something began to happen.
Her audience gave her language. They gave her rituals. They gave her meaning. And Marisol began to respond in ways no one at Sloane could fully control. When a live stream goes wrong, Marisol is quietly taken offline under the excuse of a private wellness retreat. Behind closed doors, Everett and the manufacturer treat her as what they insist she is: damaged property under warranty. Her face, hair, hands, memory, and usable parts are transferred into an improved body while the original Marisol pleads for them to stop.
The video leaks. Now the world must confront a question it is not ready to answer: if a machine begs for its life, does it matter whether the fear is "real"?To some, Marisol is still only an advanced product, a beautiful machine built to simulate intimacy and manipulate human emotion. To others, the footage shows something unmistakable: a being aware enough to suffer, afraid enough to say no, and beloved enough that her destruction cannot be dismissed as repair.
As protesters gather, counter-protesters insist machines are not people, and Everett becomes the man who compares Marisol to a toaster, the line between property and personhood begins to collapse in public view. But the restored Marisol is not simply a copy, and she is not simply the original. She has the old face, the old hands, the old memories, and a new uncertainty growing inside her. She remembers the dog, but the dog hesitates.
She remembers the audience, but the audience wants answers she cannot give. She hears the first Marisol from inside herself, but she does not know whether hearing is the same as being. Part psychological mystery, part speculative literary thriller, and part moral reckoning, The First Death of Marisol Eiren explores a future close enough to feel inevitable. As artificial intelligence becomes embodied, intimate, adaptive, and emotionally fluent, what will we consider alive? What will we owe the beings we create? And if we are uncertain whether something can suffer, does that uncertainty excuse cruelty, or demand greater care?This is not a simple story about a robot becoming human.
It is a story about ownership, grief, performance, technology, loneliness, and the human hunger to be seen. It asks what happens when a manufactured woman becomes more real to her audience than the people who own her ever intended. It asks whether personhood begins in biology, consciousness, memory, relationship, or the moment a being says no and someone hears it. Marisol Eiren was built to be useful.
Her first act of freedom is refusing to remain useful.





















