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Bruce Balfour

Author of The Forge of Mars

10 Works 360 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Bruce Balfour

Works by Bruce Balfour

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1958
Gender
male
Agent
Richard Curtis
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA
Places of residence
Novato, California, USA
Map Location
USA

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Reviews

6 reviews
I initially tried to get into this book, but just couldn't. It didn't seem that interesting. But I tried again a few years later, and it turned out to be interesting after all. But it wasn't a *great* read. For example, there were too many subplots that weren't tied together till near the end. That got confusing and aggravating. Like "The Forge of Mars", it had a variety of different themes in it, including chase scenes and espionage worthy of a thriller.
A few too many characters to keep track of. Interesting to have so many themes in it, including Navajo culture alongside virtual reality and AI, but somehow it didn't quite work for me.
Bruce Balfour is the author of science fiction novels The Forge of Mars, The Digital Dead, and Prometheus Road.

The Forge of Mars (rating: 3/5) concerns mysterious artifacts found in caverns on Mars. I read it in 2004 and noted that while it had a few too many characters to keep track of, I found it interesting that it had so many themes in it, including Navajo culture right alongside virtual reality and AI (artificial intelligence).

Scientist Tau Wolfsinger and archaeologist Kate McCloud, the show more main characters of The Forge of Mars, also appear in The Digital Dead. "Virtual versions of the dead control the desires of the ones they've left behind." I tried to get interested in The Digital Dead but couldn't, and wound up abandoning it in 2006.

But for some reason I thought I'd give Balfour another chance. I just finished Prometheus Road (rating: 3/5). Like the previous two books, virtual reality and AI play key roles, but this is not Wolfsinger's and McCloud's world. This world is a post-apocalyptic landscape governed by gods with control issues. The lead character, Tom Eliot, must face these "gods" in order to free the land of their control.

Now here's the curious thing. I'm tempted to give The Digital Dead another chance. There's some precedent for that with me. It wouldn't be the first time I've done it.
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nicely done. who is this guy? i thought, intending to search out more. designer of the early game classic Neuromancer, as it turns out, a game i still remember fondly. and that's just nifty.
½

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Associated Authors

Jean Pierre Targete Cover artist
Craig White Cover artist
Julie Rogers Text Designer
Judith Murello Cover designer

Statistics

Works
10
Members
360
Popularity
#66,629
Rating
3.2
Reviews
6
ISBNs
7

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