MY NAME IS LEGION by Roger Zelazny
An excellent, albeit dated (handfuls of punchcards as personal data entries, etc.) science fiction collection (three short stories). I guess you could say it is Zelazny's sci-fi take on the classic detective genre as high-tech mercenary for hire.
I commented on this book here a few years ago, calling the main "unnamed" character in the volume a "literary uncle of Jack," or something to that effect.
I purchased a U.K. First hardcover printing of LEGION online a few years ago only to receive a book whose dust jacket was disintigrating and whose main cover had a broken spine and was on it's last legs. I had the cover restored (which basically means replaced), and then I had a co-worker who is a wiz with graphics scan a paperback cover edition of LEGION, then print it out as a nice (larger of course) new shiny color dust jacket (which I inserted into the old plastic library sleeve previously occupied by the former crumbling dust jacket).
The pages inside are yellowing, but otherwise it is like holding a brand new book. Now if I could only get past that fact that British editors spell words like "specialization" with an "s" instead of a "z"!
It's fun, and as stated by others, above, a "still-relevant" read.
Ciao.
Michael