[quote author=Rockimedes]
...Any help would be apreciated!
[/quote]
Might want to look into these books or not;
Stephen Donaldson
The Gap series (1990–96)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gap_Cycle
The Gap Into Conflict: The Real Story
Wagner's opera cycle - the five books below;
The Gap Into Vision: Forbidden Knowledge
The Gap Into Power: A Dark And Hungry God Arises
The Gap Into Power: A Dark And Hungry God Arises
The Gap Into Madness: Chaos And Order
The Gap Into Ruin: This Day All Gods Di
The evil party written in the book, amongst many (corporations), were called the Amnion. One reviewer hated the books and said he was cheering for the Amnion; which explains psychopathic thinking and behaviour, because the Amnion in a way, are everything 4d STS describes – pure stealthy feeders. Many 3d people are the same. too.
The Gap is the concept of crossing huge amounts of space, faster then light. DNA research was banned and the corporations took it off planet. Thinking back, much of what was described seems to mimics our reality today, politically and otherwise. The beauty and ugliness of people and what mistakenly one presumes - being trapped in and shaking programs.
Here is one description below;
http://www.reviewsbygavrielle.com/gap.shtml
Despite its small scale, The Real Story manages to introduce many new SF concepts, including the gap, the UMCP, zone implants, ore mining and ore pirates. Forbidden Knowledge’s scope widens to include the Amnion and forbidden space, Min and Warden and their essential benignity, the possibility of corruption in the UMCP. A Dark And Hungry God Arises introduces Holt and Norna, and it becomes clear that the work encompasses the clash between good and evil, order and chaos, UMC and UMCP, human and Amnion. The remaining two books work out the fate of the entire human species, both within the species in the clash between Warden and Holt and outside it in the clash between the human and the Amnion.
The Real Story is personal; Forbidden Knowledge veers between the extremes of the personal and the political, with the two threads gradually converging in the following books until by the final sequence of events they are virtually indistinguishable.