by I am ST » Tue Nov 16, 2010 11:01 pm
I am now in a Science-Fiction mood, and have spent all my spare time in the past few days devouring classics.
Accelerando, by C. Stross - The kool Game Cat from Jeff Noon's Vurt meets Charles Stross' idealized vision of himself. They go off into the Singularity, don't like it, so go for the Star Trek future instead. Has a very 2001 "behold, multitouch phones!" feel to it. Pretty terrible overall. Still had I never heard of Kardashev scales, Matrioska Brains, computronium, AI, uploading, solar sails and the like, I would probably be blown away. So I give it Two stars.
Canticle for Leibowitz, by Walter Miller Jr. - "How the dark ages would have looked like if the Romans and the Han had destroyed each other in a nuclear exchange" except, of course, the Nuclear apocalypse happens sometime in the 20th century. More fantasy than sci-fi, really. Snippets from across 2000 years, as Humanity is slowly rebuilding after the Fallout. Christianity plays a central role as half the book is basically melancholy comparisons to Irish monks. Humanity seems doomed to repeat its mistake, except at the end the leaders talk about "dirty" nukes that would render whole continents sterile for millennia. There's even the customary escape to α-Centauri at the end. Still, as post-apocalypse stories go, it's pretty damn good. Three Stars.