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Loading... Brute Orbitsby George Zebrowski
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. ...[A] meditation upon the subject of crime and punishment: what is a crime, it asks, and what is appropriate punishment? ...[Brute Orbits] points out that what is criminal depends on who makes the laws and who benefits from the crime. The novel does not shrink from punishment, but it does point out that so far nothing much has worked as intended. -- Masterpieces of Science Fiction no reviews | add a review
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High Crimes Call for High PunishmentIt is the twenty-first century. Convicts are sentenced to asteroids that move in ever-widening solar orbits, timed to return when their terms run out. But a few ambitious administrators discover that small "errors" in velocity can rid them of selected groups altogether: the hardcore violent, the mentally defective, and especially the political dissidents. Enduring the black vise of interstellar space-time, these human rejects--men and women mixed together--create their own Darwinian societies, struggling to survive.
Back on Earth, a handful of sympathetic and curious scientists have not forgotten these lost citizens. When a technological breakthrough makes it possible to overtake these scattered asteroids, a courageous team sets out to go where none has willingly gone before. What they discover in these "brute orbits" is both provocative and moving--a startling vision of humanity you will never forget.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:08 -0400)
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