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Forever Peace by Joe Haldeman
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Forever Peace (Remembering Tomorrow)

by Joe Haldeman

Series: Forever War (Companion story)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
886184,757 (3.53)13
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Ace (1998), Mass Market Paperback

Member:michaelcruse
Collections:Your libraryRating:*****
Tags:war, science fiction, near future
American (3) fantasy (3) fiction (79) Forever War (7) Haldeman (7) Hugo (12) Hugo Award (10) Hugo Nominee (3) hugo winner (22) Joe Haldeman (6) military (12) military sf (10) mmpb (4) near future (5) Nebula (11) Nebula Award (26) novel (19) own (8) owned (6) paperback (11) read (25) sci-fi (44) science fiction (178) series (8) sf (63) sff (20) signed (9) space opera (4) unread (8) war (21)
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This a very different book to The Forever War, and not really a sequel. It covers some similar territory, but there are no characters in common, and the overall plots are unrelated (and conflicting). However, this book is as well written as The Forever War, and I enjoyed it.

http://www.stillhq.com/book/Joe_Halde... ( )
  mikal | Nov 16, 2009 |
In the future world of Forever Peace, the United States possesses nanoforge technology, which can create pretty much anything out of raw materials. The U.S. is also in a perpetual war with most of the countries in the Southern hemisphere, which don’t have the nanoforge. U.S. military fights the war virtually via robots called “soldierboys,” which are controlled by soldiers who are “jacked in” to the killing machines hundreds of miles away.

Julian is one of those soldiers, but when a mission goes horribly wrong, he can no longer bring himself to fight. When his lover, Amelia, discovers that a planned physics experiment will destroy the universe, creating a doomsday device that anyone with a nanoforge and enough raw materials can build, Julian realizes that mankind can no longer afford our warlike nature. Then another scientist friend reveals a solution, one that may either enhance our humanity or remove it altogether.

This was a very entertaining book, with a lot of interesting ideas. I particularly like the way the experience of jacking, not such a new concept in science fiction, is explored. However, after a very long build-up and way too much exposition, I found the end to be unsatisfactorily abrupt and too cut-and-dried. It does seem like eliminating our warlike tendencies is the right course of action to take, but how ethical is it to do so against peoples’ will? No character really takes a stand on this or offers an alternative viewpoint for the rather sticky ethical question raised. The only opposition are such grotesque nutjobs who will do literally anything to bring about the apocalypse so that of course the protagonists seem very sane by comparison.

So even though I really enjoyed Forever Peace, I ended up wishing for a bit more depth to it. ( )
  sturlington | Sep 18, 2009 |
Not a continuation of The Forever War (one of the all-time classics of science fiction), but more of an intellectual sequel, this turns out to be half of a great book. ( )
  wanack | Aug 9, 2009 |
The book is very well written, but I just couldn't get into it. The story is kind of bland and it's really more psy-fi than sci-fi to me. It doesn't have very much action or suspense. It hits on a lot of things, it's got romance, racism, and as someone else said above, the ethics of forcing an operation on individuals for the good of the world as a whole. But it never really goes deep in any of them. I may be being too hard on it, but I was just expecting more from a Hugo and Nebula winner. ( )
  bparman | May 18, 2009 |
I fairly like this novel. The story was very engaging in the beginning, but fell off in the middle. Mr. Haldeman explores in much detail a very interesting topic. How does a particular advancement in technology impact the world. And not just in total, but down to an individual. I would recommend this book, even if you have not read Forever War. They are written in the same universe, but are completely disjointed. ( )
  geordicalrissian | Apr 16, 2009 |
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"Man was born into barbarism, when killing his fellow man was a normal condition of existence. He became endowed with a conscience. And he has now reached the day when violence toward another human being must become as abhorrent as eating another's flesh."

—Martin Luther King, Jr.
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Forever Peace

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0441005667, Mass Market Paperback)

Julian Class is a full-time professor and part-time combat veteran who spends a third of each month virtually wired to a robotic "soldierboy." The soldierboys, along with flyboys and other advanced constructs, allow the U.S. to wage a remotely controlled war against constant uprisings in the Third World. The conflicts are largely driven by the so-called First World countries' access to nanoforges--devices that can almost instantly manufacture any product imaginable, given the proper raw materials--and the Third World countries' lack of access to these devices. But even as Julian learns that the consensual reality shared by soldierboy operators can lead to universal peace, the nanoforges create a way for humanity to utterly destroy itself, and it will be a race against time to see which will happen first. Although Forever Peace bears a title similar to Joe Haldeman's classic novel The Forever War, he says it's not a sequel.

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 14:53:36 -0500)

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