Carregue numa fotografia para ir para os Livros Google.
A carregar... Heads (1990)por Greg Bear
Nenhum(a) A carregar...
Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se irá gostar deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. A short novel, with much less complexity than #1--William is trying to produce absolute-zero, his wife, Rho, has purchased 400+ corpsicles (who will never be resuscitated) and Micky is trying to coerce enough money to support both their efforts. The plot revolves around a) what will happen when/if they produce 0-degrees; b) can they read the minds of the frozen heads; c) how can they survive the attempts of a politically powerful religious cult that is intent on destroying the entire family. I read this novella because of the premise: some lunar colonists come into possession of a bunch of cryogenically-preserved heads, from an Alcor-like foundation. Can they figure out a way to read the memories of those colonists? I've been reading sf stories about life extension technologies for a class I'm guying to teach. Well, this book has very little to say about its actual premise, as it mostly focuses on largely uninteresting and seemingly over-simplistic politics on the Moon. There's also some Scientology satire; maybe this would have felt fresher in 1991, but thirty years on it's pretty dull stuff. The revelation about why the Scientologists don't want the heads revived is blindingly obvious, but takes the protagonists a hundred pages to catch up to the reader on. I guess this is set in the same milieu as Bear's Moving Mars, but that was a much better book. A short book by Bear - more of a novella, really. The moon has been colonized, and society has developed into a clanlike structure of family/companies. On one of these, a man is working on scientific experiments to try to achieve absolute zero, which he believes would result in phenomena interesting to physics. His sister comes across an opportunity to acquire a batch of frozen heads, cryonically preserved in centuries past by those hoping for future resurrection. This seems unlikely, but she hopes to be able to use new techniques to reads some of these heads' preserved memories, to study anthropologially. Clinching the deal is that two of the individuals wetre the founders of their clan. Unfortunately, unbeknownst to them, another of the heads is that of the founder of a powerful religious group (bearing more than a passing resemblance to Scientology), and that group will do anything to stop the transfer of heads from happening... Pretty good sci-fi, the ending is a bit overblown, however. sem críticas | adicionar uma crítica
Está contido emPrémios
Two hundred years in the future, the Moon is emerging from an age of innocence. Once pioneers, the easiest motto for these Lunar families is 'Cut the Politics'. They think they are safe from the sophistication and corruption of political intrigue. William Pierce is searching for absolute zero. No scientist has succeeded yet, and William is almost there...His wife Rho has bought 410 heads, cryogenically frozen centuries before in the hope of resurrection. She thinks she can read them for information. But there are dangers. William doesn't quite understand that his experiments could distort space and time. Rho doesn't realise that her heads will bring interference from a new and deadly faction, the devotedly religious Logologists. 'Cut the Politics'. But they can't. And the politics of this society could destroy much, much more than Rho and William's work... Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
Current DiscussionsNenhum(a)Capas populares
Google Books — A carregar... GénerosSistema Decimal de Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos EUA (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
É você?Torne-se num Autor LibraryThing. |
There's not a whole lot to say about this one - the Big Reveal is so obvious that I had been anticipating it ever since conflict started, and the events at the end were of the "well duh, what did you *think* would happen" variety. Which is not really a flaw in the novel, as it means the author realistically depicted how these events would play out and it is only the characters who are clueless, but it is not that entertaining either.
The big surprise with this novel is the evisceration of, shall we saw, Elron Hoover's First Church of Appliantology:
This is particularly interesting because, while the "church" harrassment of critics was in full swing when this novel was written, it was only in 1993 (a full year later) that Steven Fishman released documents in court that publicly revealed just how ludicrous the purported religious doctrine actually was. South Park famously skewered these beliefs some ten years later, but Greg Bear seems to have been ahead of the curve here. As usual. ( )