Rudy Rucker
Author of Software
About the Author
Rudy Rucker is a mathematician, computer scientist, professor, and writer who has twice won the Philip K. Dick Award for best SF paperback original, and has published a number of successful popular books on mathematical subjects, including The Fourth Dimension and Infinity and the Mind. He lives in show more Los Gatos, California. show less
Image credit: Rudy Rucker
Series
Works by Rudy Rucker
The Lifebox, the Seashell, and the Soul: What Gnarly Computation Taught Me About Ultimate Reality, the Meaning of Life, and How to Be Happy (2005) 189 copies, 6 reviews
Flurb 03 4 copies
Flurb 01 4 copies
Flurb 02 4 copies
Flurb 7 4 copies
Flurb 04 4 copies
Tales of Houdini 3 copies
Chu and the Nants 3 copies
Peg-Man 3 copies
Flurb 8 3 copies
Flurb 05 3 copies
Message Found In A Gravity Wave 2 copies
Flurb 6 2 copies
The Perfect Wave {novelette} 2 copies
The Fnoor Hen 2 copies
The Knobby Giraffe 2 copies
Flurb #13 2 copies
Tangiers Routines 2 copies
The Third Bomb 2 copies
A New Golden Age [short fiction] 2 copies
HORMIGA CANYON — Author — 2 copies
POST-SINGULAR [short story] 2 copies
@lantis 1 copy
℗Le ℗formiche nel computer 1 copy
In The Lost City Of Leng 1 copy
Emojis 1 copy
All The Interviews 1 copy
Το Άπειρο και ο Νους 1 copy
Squinks 1 copy
Mary Mary 1 copy
Realware la materia infinita 1 copy
Postsingular: Writing Notes 1 copy
Fibonacci's Humors 1 copy
Quantum Telepathy 1 copy
Flurb 9 1 copy
Schrodinger's Cat 1 copy
Bad Ideas 1 copy
Qlone 1 copy
Easy As Pie 1 copy
Frek In The Grulloo Woods 1 copy
Postsingular Outtakes 1 copy
Val And Me 1 copy
Jumpin' Jack Flash 1 copy
Petroglyph Man 1 copy
Watergirl 1 copy
Dispatches From Interzone 1 copy
The Skug 1 copy
Flurb 10 1 copy
Inertia 1 copy
Sufferin' Succotash 1 copy
Pi In The Sky 1 copy
Buzz 1 copy
The Facts Of Life 1 copy
The Man Who Ate Himself 1 copy
A New Experiment With Time 1 copy
Associated Works
The Mind's I: Fantasies and Reflections on Self and Soul (1981) — Contributor — 3,008 copies, 23 reviews
This Will Make You Smarter: New Scientific Concepts to Improve Your Thinking (Edge Question Series) (2012) — Contributor — 898 copies, 17 reviews
What Is Your Dangerous Idea? Today's Leading Thinkers on the Unthinkable (2007) — Contributor — 668 copies, 8 reviews
Storming the Reality Studio: A Casebook of Cyberpunk and Postmodern Science Fiction (1991) — Contributor — 262 copies
What Might Have Been, Volumes 1 & 2: Alternate Empires, Alternate Heroes (1990) — Contributor — 184 copies, 2 reviews
ParaSpheres: Extending Beyond the Spheres of Literary and Genre Fiction: Fabulist and New Wave Fabulist Stories (2006) — Contributor — 65 copies
Thoreau's microscope plus "Paul and me" and "Fidelity" and "Know how, can do" and more (2018) — some editions — 44 copies, 2 reviews
The Last Books of H.G. Wells: The Happy Turning: A Dream of Life; and, Mind at the End of its Tether (1968) — Foreword, some editions — 36 copies
Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact: Vol. CI, No. 4 (March 30, 1981) (1981) — Contributor — 16 copies
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction September 1988, Vol. 75, No. 3 (1988) — Author — 13 copies
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 42, No. 1 & 2 [January/February 2018] (2018) — Contributor — 12 copies
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 42, No. 3 & 4 [March/April 2018] (2018) — Contributor — 12 copies, 1 review
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction December 1982, Vol. 63, No. 6 (1982) — Contributor — 10 copies
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 41, No. 7 & 8 [July/August 2017] (2017) — Contributor — 9 copies, 1 review
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 47, No. 1 & 2 [January/February 2023] — Contributor — 5 copies, 2 reviews
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 43, No. 11 & 12 [November/December 2019] (2019) — Contributor — 5 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Rucker, Rudolf von Bitter
- Birthdate
- 1946-03-22
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Swarthmore College (BA ∙ Mathematics ∙ 1967)
Rutgers University (PhD ∙ Mathematics ∙ 1973)
St. Xavier High School (Louisville, Kentucky) - Occupations
- professor (Computer Science)
- Organizations
- San Jose State University
State University of New York at Geneseo
Heidelberg University
Randolph-Macon Women's College (Lynchburg ∙ Virginia) - Agent
- John Silbersack (The Bent Agency)
- Relationships
- Hegel, G.W.F. (great-great-great-grandfather)
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Louisville, Kentucky, USA
- Places of residence
- Los Gatos, California, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
This one might be too wild for maiden aunts. Heck, maybe it's too out-there for the run-of-the-mill reader of SF.
But for the REST OF US, it's a truly wild ride that ramps up the same wild directions as Rucker has been taking us all along. Let's go crazy!
First of all, the aliens aren't ALL dead. Two-dimensional, multi-timeline-living, reality-hacking aliens. Death isn't really a big thing for these guys. Blowing up their own cities doesn't really mean much because the cities live on in all show more the other timelines. Lucky them!
So what happens when they hand over their magic wands to some of our favorite moldies and human-consciousness downloaded moldies and natural humans that lets them create.... anything out of anything?
Yeah. I'm talking about TOTAL REALITY RE-WRITES.
Oh. Shit.
Now we're talking about people who have just been upgraded from humans to robots in Software, from robots to humans in Wetware to, from everyone upgrading or refusing to upgrade into intelligent mold in Freeware, to upgrading into ANYTHING GOES in Realware. :) :)
This could turn into something really messed up and incoherent, mind you, but Rudy Rucker goes ahead and just turns it into a delightful social satire. Very much like the rest of the Quadralogy. :)
I'm just glad that Cobb got what he wanted and the aliens made their flying saucer. I love it when a good meme gets a little fun play.
But humanity? I know this isn't much of a surprise, but we're a bunch of freaking morons.
Even when given a gift like this, we still manage to **** it the **** up. Wow. And this isn't some slow morality play, either. This is a no-holds-barred ****fest.
Gotta love it. :)
Freaking perverts. show less
But for the REST OF US, it's a truly wild ride that ramps up the same wild directions as Rucker has been taking us all along. Let's go crazy!
First of all, the aliens aren't ALL dead. Two-dimensional, multi-timeline-living, reality-hacking aliens. Death isn't really a big thing for these guys. Blowing up their own cities doesn't really mean much because the cities live on in all show more the other timelines. Lucky them!
So what happens when they hand over their magic wands to some of our favorite moldies and human-consciousness downloaded moldies and natural humans that lets them create.... anything out of anything?
Yeah. I'm talking about TOTAL REALITY RE-WRITES.
Oh. Shit.
Now we're talking about people who have just been upgraded from humans to robots in Software, from robots to humans in Wetware to, from everyone upgrading or refusing to upgrade into intelligent mold in Freeware, to upgrading into ANYTHING GOES in Realware. :) :)
This could turn into something really messed up and incoherent, mind you, but Rudy Rucker goes ahead and just turns it into a delightful social satire. Very much like the rest of the Quadralogy. :)
I'm just glad that Cobb got what he wanted and the aliens made their flying saucer. I love it when a good meme gets a little fun play.
But humanity? I know this isn't much of a surprise, but we're a bunch of freaking morons.
Even when given a gift like this, we still manage to **** it the **** up. Wow. And this isn't some slow morality play, either. This is a no-holds-barred ****fest.
Gotta love it. :)
Freaking perverts. show less
This book has more novel ideas and settings from one paragraph to the next then most sf&f authors manage to squeeze out in the course of an entire tome. This book is some combination of a drug induced hallucinatory vision with Alice in Wonderland, yet manages to pull off a clear hero journey's plot. In contrast to the formulas and tropes of most books I read, this 2-decade old book is fresh, original, and compellingly crazy.
Low comedy, high satire, and the question of whether personalities that are transferred from meat to robot are the same person, and whether this is the future of humanity, or whether it's a good idea at all. With rebel robots on the moon about to engage in their own internal conflict, their creator is offered a chance at immortality, but is he going to be freed from sickness and death to live potentially forever or is he going to me merged into a single vast consciusness, or is it all the show more same thing?
Very early cyberpunk has this weird characteristic of looking and sounding noting like what we think cyberpunk should, and this seems more like some sort of surreal slacker stoner beach-bum comedy, only with robots on the moon. Nonetheless it's all here if you look closely enough. show less
Very early cyberpunk has this weird characteristic of looking and sounding noting like what we think cyberpunk should, and this seems more like some sort of surreal slacker stoner beach-bum comedy, only with robots on the moon. Nonetheless it's all here if you look closely enough. show less
Nice to be reminded that my first blast of true sci fi sensawunda came from stories like these, not big bold space opera, but strange twisted, weird and often hilarious stories that could end in utter global catastrophe and still somehow feel cheerful about it.
Spanning thirty years of collaboration, these stories remain amazingly fresh and sharp and challenging and delightful, with no regard for the conventional boundaries of reality or normality while somehow remaining grounded enough in show more both to deliver satisfying coherent narratives no matter how deeply strange the stories themselves truly get. Each story features recognisable stand-ins for the author themselves in various guises, which shouldn't work so well so often, but they do.
6/4/23 Just to note my reading of another of their transreal wetware slime-mould-jelly-phone post-pandemic climate change futures, Fibonacci's Humors (sic), once again a lot of fun with the addition of a distinct Italian flavouring to its ruined-Austin setting. show less
Spanning thirty years of collaboration, these stories remain amazingly fresh and sharp and challenging and delightful, with no regard for the conventional boundaries of reality or normality while somehow remaining grounded enough in show more both to deliver satisfying coherent narratives no matter how deeply strange the stories themselves truly get. Each story features recognisable stand-ins for the author themselves in various guises, which shouldn't work so well so often, but they do.
6/4/23 Just to note my reading of another of their transreal wetware slime-mould-jelly-phone post-pandemic climate change futures, Fibonacci's Humors (sic), once again a lot of fun with the addition of a distinct Italian flavouring to its ruined-Austin setting. show less
Lists
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 158
- Also by
- 66
- Members
- 10,508
- Popularity
- #2,267
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 193
- ISBNs
- 267
- Languages
- 12
- Favorited
- 27




















