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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Nifty ideas don't make a novel. The first act of this ambitious novel, was both fascinating and touching. I was impressed with the addition of nearly a dozen unique characters introduced throughout the rest of the novel, all of which had their own agenda, all of which were interesting. This is foremost a science fiction novel, introducing new social structures, new economic structures, and many technological marvels as savvy and twisted as Stross and Sterling write. It's large with nanotech and artificial intelligence with a heavy dose of big brother. This is cyberpunk colored with a gloss of prosperity and abundance. All of the excitement without the gut-wrenching despair and loss. Highly recommended. Not being much of a scifi reader, I picked this up on a recommendation from Cory Doctorow on BoingBoing--and am I ever glad I did, just can't wait to read the sequel (Mind Over Ship). Marusek does a crazily great job at drawing in complex technological ideas--making them all extremely believable in their futuristic construction--and creating a cast of three (four?)-dimensional characters. Intrigue, loss, avarice, love, loneliness, exhuberance all leap from the page. Marusek depicts a very believable near future where strong nanotech has made some big changes to the world, but no Singularity is in sight. Even with huge labor forces composed of clones, artificial intelligences, and nanotechnological terrorism, people are still people and no one is doing weird things with brain interfaces to head off in transhuman directions. (For contrast, look at Alastair Reynolds’ Revelation Space universe.) The tale tracks the events surrounding an attempted assassination of the woman with control over a fleet of colony starships under construction in Earth orbit and her heir; drawn into the mess are her ex-husband, a colleague from his economic collective, a religious officiary from the board of directors of the woman’s corporation, and a married couple of clone laborers. The story is a page-turner, but it doesn’t reveal the full extent of the opposing conspiracy; I expect we’ll learn more in the sequel, Mind Over Ship. A conspiracy/adventure SF novel, written by an author who clearly has as much of a grasp for cultural nuance as he does for technological speculation. This book has a similar appeal to The Diamond Age (another favorite). LIke The Diamond Age, it tweaked my perception of the world hard enough to make ordinary life seem very surreal for several days. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0765312670, Hardcover)Counting Heads is David Marusek's extraordinary launch as an SF novelist: The year is 2134, and the Information Age has given rise to the Boutique Economy in which mass production and mass consumption are rendered obsolete. Life extension therapies have increased the human lifespan by centuries. Loyal mentars (artificial intelligence) and robots do most of society's work. The Boutique Economy has made redundant ninety-nine percent of the world's fifteen billion human inhabitants. The world would be a much better place if they all simply went away. Eleanor K. Starke, one of the world's leading citizens is assassinated, and her daughter, Ellen, is mortally wounded. Only Ellen, the heir to her mother's financial empire, is capable of saving Earth from complete domination plotted by the cynical, selfish, immortal rich, if she, herself, survives. Her cryonically frozen head is in the hands of her family's enemies. A ragtag ensemble of unlikely heroes join forces to rescue Ellen's head, all for their own purposes. Counting Heads arrives as a science fiction novel like a bolt of electricity, galvanizing readers with an entirely new vision of the future. It's the debut of the year in SF. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:11 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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