The Unincorporated Man

Justin Cord, a successful industrialist, was secretly frozen in the early 21st century, is discovered and resurrected.

In the future he awakens to, by law everyone is incorporated as a publicly traded corporation at birth, with shares that can be bought or sold like stocks.

Justin cannot accept only part ownership of himself, even if that places him in conflict with a civilization that extends outside the solar system, to the Oort Cloud and beyond.

A Gizmodo review praised the world building but criticized the writing and one-sided libertarian leanings.

[1] A reviewer argued that the supposed protagonist makes illogical and emotion-based arguments against incorporation while the supposed antagonists and defenders of the incorporation system make sensible and logical economic arguments that the system allows humans to reach their full potential through monetizing human capital, increasing the scope for more voluntary transactions, and gains from trade.