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40+ Works 1,895 Members 29 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: William F. Wu

Series

Works by William F. Wu

Isaac Asimov's Robot City #3 : Cyborg (1987) — Author — 313 copies, 7 reviews
Isaac Asimov's Robot City #6 : Perihelion (1988) 220 copies, 6 reviews
Isaac Asimov's Robots in Time : Predator (1993) — Author — 174 copies, 2 reviews
An Enemy Reborn (1998) 172 copies, 3 reviews
Isaac Asimov's Robots in Time : Marauder (1993) — Author — 135 copies
Isaac Asimov's Robots in Time : Warrior (1993) — Author — 124 copies
Isaac Asimov's Robots in Time : Invader (1994) — Author — 119 copies
Isaac Asimov's Robots in Time : Emperor (1994) — Author — 113 copies
Isaac Asimov's Robots in Time : Dictator (1994) — Author — 106 copies
Isaac Asimov's Robot City, Volume 2 [Omnibus] (1987) — Author — 77 copies, 3 reviews
Isaac Asimov's Robot City, Volume 3 [Omnibus] (1988) — Author — 55 copies
Masterplay (1987) 47 copies
In Lunacy (1993) 36 copies
Hong on the Range (Millennium Book) (1989) 31 copies, 3 reviews
The Robin Hood Ambush (1990) 27 copies

Associated Works

Tales from Jabba's Palace (1995) — Contributor — 1,429 copies, 12 reviews
One-Eyed Jacks (1990) — Contributor — 392 copies, 2 reviews
Card Sharks (1993) — Contributor — 271 copies
Faery! (1985) — Contributor — 210 copies
Men of War (1984) — Contributor — 205 copies
Codominium: Revolt on War World (1992) — Contributor — 155 copies
Twilight Zone: 19 Original Stories on the 50th Anniversary (2009) — Contributor — 143 copies, 3 reviews
American Dragons: Twenty-five Asian American Voices (1995) — Contributor — 142 copies, 2 reviews
Day of the Tyrant (1985) — Contributor — 138 copies
Not of Woman Born (1999) — Contributor — 134 copies, 2 reviews
Warrior (1986) — Contributor — 122 copies
Warrior Enchantresses (1996) — Contributor — 112 copies, 1 review
The Best of Pulphouse: The Hardback Magazine (1991) — Contributor — 101 copies
Borderlands 4 (1995) — Contributor — 92 copies
New Stories from the Twilight Zone (1991) — Contributor — 92 copies
Ancient Enchantresses (1995) — Contributor — 85 copies
Crime Through Time II (1998) — Contributor — 81 copies, 1 review
Unicorns II (1992) — Contributor — 68 copies
Texas Hold'em (2018) — Contributor — 65 copies, 2 reviews
The Dragon and the Stars (2010) — Contributor — 64 copies, 5 reviews
Free Space (1997) — Contributor — 59 copies, 1 review
The Year's Best Fantasy Stories: 10 (1984) — Contributor — 56 copies, 2 reviews
The Seventh Omni Book of Science Fiction (1989) — Contributor — 45 copies
Andromeda 3 (1978) — Contributor — 41 copies
Andromeda 2 (1977) — Contributor — 32 copies
Phantoms of the Night (1996) — Contributor — 30 copies
Sleeper Straddle (2024) — Contributor — 24 copies
Isaac Asimov's Aliens & Outworlders (1983) — Contributor — 21 copies
Rat Tales (2025) — Contributor — 8 copies
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 43, No. 1 & 2 [January/February 2019] (2019) — Contributor — 5 copies, 1 review
Omni Magazine March 1985 (1985) — Contributor — 4 copies

Tagged

.rtf (8) Asimov (16) Box R1 (8) Calibre import (8) Casi (8) ebook (37) fantasy (52) fiction (96) Isaac Asimov (11) lit (12) mmpb (11) novel (14) own (14) owned (16) paperback (17) PB (17) PDF (8) read (21) Robot City (38) robots (42) Robots in Time (18) Ryan's (8) science fiction (318) series (13) sf (66) sff (17) short stories (14) time travel (8) to-read (52) unread (19)

Common Knowledge

Other names
Wu, William Franking
Birthdate
1951-03-13
Gender
male
Organizations
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Places of residence
Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Kansas City, Missouri, USA

Members

Reviews

35 reviews
This is the conclusion to the six book Robot City series and I, for one, found it fairly satisfying. Robot City hasn't been the best written series I've ever read. Perhaps part of the reason is that most of the books were written by different authors, which is an unusual way to go about writing a series. It's lacked in some ways. The last two books, in particular, I thought were quite bad. But the idea behind the series was original and I appreciated that, and so I continued reading. And I'm show more glad I did.

In this book, Derec, Ariel, Mandelbrot, and Wolruf find themselves back in Robot City after their horrible time on Earth and they're searching for the insane Dr. Avery, who has infected Derec with a disease in which "chemfets" have infected his system and, as a result, a miniature Robot City is literally growing inside him and it is killing him. He is weak and needs to sleep all the time and he is in a lot of pain. Meanwhile, Ariel has been cured of the Amnemonic plague and is slowing regaining her memory. That's good, because she really carries Derec in this book.

When they descend the pyramid they landed on with the Key of Perihelion, Derec and Ariel are immediately accosted by a Hunter robot who attempts to take them captive. In fact, they don't see too many robots at all. Robot City has changed since they were last there and they come to realize Dr. Avery has reprogrammed the robots somehow for some unknown reason. He's taken their personalities and creativity away from them and has installed a new "migration" program for all humanoid robots to follow, leaving just a few robots to keep the city running.

The four of them escape the Hunter robot, but more Hunters appear, so they flee. They eventually escape to a warehouse where they hide out. Meanwhile, their old former cyborg friend, Jeff, from a previous book, returns to the planet with a big spaceship, since he owes them a favor, presumably to get them off planet and help save their lives. He knows they'll be glad to see him. He lands in the middle of the city and is immediately accosted by Hunter robots. He's stunned. He, too, can see Robot City has changed. Mandelbrot had been able to determine a ship was landing with a human in it, so he takes a truck to the ship in an effort to save him. He does and brings him back to the warehouse. They all swap information and it turns out Jeff had met Dr. Avery through his professor father a few years back. Also, Ariel's mother had been a big contributor to Dr. Avery's funds when it came to building Robot City. Derec is too weak to really join in. They decide they have to find Dr. Avery quickly to get him to save Derec's life, but where to look? They do a scan and find crop fields in the hills outside the city. They decide that must be where Avery is hiding out, so they decide to head there. They decide Mandelbrot and Wolruf should take off separately to act as decoys so the humans can take off in the spaceship and somehow get to the crops to look for Avery.

I don't want to spoil the surprise ending, but there's a lot of action and a lot of tension and they do eventually find Avery and all of the mysteries are finally explained. And there are some real shocking surprises at the end of the book. Frankly, I enjoyed the hell out of the final few pages. This isn't a five star book, but I think it's a fairly four star effort. I'm glad I ended up giving this series a chance. For some quick, lightweight sci fi -- recommended.
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I may have really enjoyed this book if I had read it when I was 11 or 12, but I still think that the illogical behavior of the main characters would have driven me nuts. For one example early on in the time travel portion of the book the team is afraid of altering the present by such actions as killing vines, breaking branches to mark a trail later in the novel with no regard for the repercussions they start a dinosaur stampede.

The reason I think a younger reader may enjoy it is as a kid I show more really enjoyed Cowboy in Africa, and the roping and riding of dinosaurs reminded me of it. show less
Indispensable as a reference for writing on -- and by -- Chinese Americans, but I wearied of William Wu's relentless politics. The Chinese in this country have faced ugly racism, as well as legal repressions not encountered by any other group of immigrants, but seeing fiction primarily through that lens numbs the mind to both the books *and* the oppression. When a literary analysis becomes predictable, it loses its impact... But again, if you're looking for a compilation regarding fiction on show more Chinese Americans, "The Yellow Peril" cannot be topped. show less
½
It didn't help that I have not read the first book of this 2 book series, While this felt like a stand-alone novel, at times it also felt like I was missing something. The pieces fell together somewhat when I read the afterword. Not only is this the 2nd book, it was written by 2 different people! Apparently they started out cooperating on the project, but Stackpole was asked later to add more to this book, which was written by William Wu. To further add to the strange feel, it is based on a show more game and game world - for a fairly obscure game from the 1990's. Even so, this was entertaining, though it felt like all the character development was done in book 1 and this book was all action. Interesting if you like game world fiction. show less
½

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Statistics

Works
40
Also by
34
Members
1,895
Popularity
#13,580
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
29
ISBNs
74
Languages
7

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