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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN num: 9780809556038
ISBN number: 0809556030
Label: Cosmos
Manufacturer: Cosmos
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 248
Printing Date: October 15, 2005
Publishing house: Cosmos
Sale Popularity Level: 107285
Studio: Cosmos
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Editor's Notes and Comments:
Product Description:
Short story collection containing such gems as 'Antibodies,' 'Bear Trap,' 'Extracts from the Club Diary,' 'A Colder War,' 'TOAST: A con report,' 'A Boy and His God,' 'Ship of Fools,' 'Dechlorinating the Moderator,' 'Yellow Snow', 'Big Brother Iron', 'Lobsters'.
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Rated by buyers
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A collection of early short stories. You can see some of the early ideas that get developed later in the novels. His later novels are much better.
Rated by buyers
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Spastic and not very entertaining IMO. Nowhere near the generally high calibre of his novels (with the exception of the truly gawdawful "Merchant Princes" series). This book is like eating greasy, artery clogging porkrinds when you could be eating a real meal instead. But, there's a lot of porkrinds getting eaten...
Rated by buyers
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ANTIBODIES alone is worth the price of admission on this book. Significant for readinig Stross' getting up to speed work and some of these stories are classic SF in their own right.
Rated by buyers
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Stross tackles the singularity in these stories. This is the concept put forth a few years ago by Vernor Vinge and Hans Moravec. That the rate of change in human society induced by technology is accelerating. And that at some point, we will build a true sentient artificial intelligence. A singularity. Since presumably that being can then quickly improve itself, and leave us pitiful mortals far behind.
Most of the stories in this collection revolve around the concept. Think of it as cyberpunk taken to an extreme. The stories were written from the late 80s to the early Noughties. The very first stories predate the Web. And one story from the early 90s warns of Y2K. Where the last sentence echoes Clarke's ending to the Nine Billion Names of God.
We are already in 2006 as I write this. One amusing note from the book was a claim made by someone else in the late 90s. That the Noughties will see change equal to the changes from 1950-2000. With only 4 years to go, that prediction seems a tad optimistic. Like Minsky's predictions in the 60s of imminent AI.
Rated by buyers
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I am not a short story fan, which is odd, given my mouldering span of attention. But there is something irritating about a tale that is over just when you start to 'get' it. But I am a Charles Stross fan, one who discovered him late, and while desperately waiting for another novel to appear, I decided to try out his shorter output via this retrospective volume selected out by the author himself.
Stross has an incredibly wide-ranging imagination. He writes hard science fiction about very far out ideas. In fact the very very first story here, Antibodies, is about a theoretical idea whose very existence can threaten reality. From there we go one to the economics of information in a very virtual universe, the coffee club that ate the world, what H. P. Lovecraft only suspected, and other, equally peculiar tales.
Stross's tongue is always squarely in his check, even as he displays an impressive intellect and a deep understanding of what the world inside a geek's head really looks like. I'm to old to be considered a geek any longer, but it is fascinating to read Stross's own spin on what was interesting about my own generation of 'techies' (the title story). And there is even a delightfully ironic narrative about a Y2K apocalypse cruise.
While I haven't been converted to a short story lover, my faith in one of the odder minds out there producing quality science fiction has been confirmed. This is a writer who very first made his mark as a short fiction writer. If you want to see what the fuss is about, with the added pleasure of occasional comments by the author, start here.
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