The Boy Who Would Live Forever
by Frederik Pohl
The Heechee Saga: Story Order (2), The Heechee Saga (6)
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The peaceful existences of the Heechee gateway creators and the human survivors of a post-apocalypse Earth are threatened by the alien Kugel and an insane human's plot to destroy the galaxy.Tags
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Member Reviews
8/10
Author [a:Frederik Pohl|22996|Frederik Pohl|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1226540337p2/22996.jpg] returns to the form of his original Heechee book, [b:Gateway|218427|Gateway (Heechee Saga, #1)|Frederik Pohl|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1441698400l/218427._SY75_.jpg|1668837], with this final installment in the Heechee Saga. Robin Broadhead plays only a background role, which was a relief to this reader, and the cast of characters, including humans, Heechee, Kugels, Old Ones, and AIs, was a mix of familiar and new, but all were interesting. The story was told in several POVs and a variety of locations, so the “voice” was never tiring or too repetitive the way the previous few books show more were with an overload of Robin’s POV and voice. Best of all, there were both intimate, personal stories and universe-wide aspects to the plot. All in all, I’m glad I persevered through some of the middle books to get to this one. show less
Author [a:Frederik Pohl|22996|Frederik Pohl|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1226540337p2/22996.jpg] returns to the form of his original Heechee book, [b:Gateway|218427|Gateway (Heechee Saga, #1)|Frederik Pohl|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1441698400l/218427._SY75_.jpg|1668837], with this final installment in the Heechee Saga. Robin Broadhead plays only a background role, which was a relief to this reader, and the cast of characters, including humans, Heechee, Kugels, Old Ones, and AIs, was a mix of familiar and new, but all were interesting. The story was told in several POVs and a variety of locations, so the “voice” was never tiring or too repetitive the way the previous few books show more were with an overload of Robin’s POV and voice. Best of all, there were both intimate, personal stories and universe-wide aspects to the plot. All in all, I’m glad I persevered through some of the middle books to get to this one. show less
I have read the other novels in Pohl’s Heechee saga and this one was just not as compelling for me. The writing style reminded me of late Heinlein in the sense that the tone seemed a bit cheeky. It’s a fine distraction - good for the beach maybe. But just not up to the same level as other novels I have read by Pohl.
Saga se încheie cu o viziune prea... pămînteană, probabil s-a dorit un fel de happy-end. Mi-aş fi dorit să aflu ceva mai mult despre Asasini, dar asta e. Per total, e o carte care încheie cum trebuie acest ciclu.
Aviz amatorilor care nu au citit celelalte volume! Dacă vă apucaţi doar de volumul ăsta, o să aflaţi prea puţin despre unele personaje - care sunt descrise mai pe larg în primele volume, şi ce fel de aventuri au trăit - şi apoi veţi fi tentaţi să vă plîngeţi că volumul nu e prea-prea şi o să daţi 2 stele. Nu e frumos! :))
Aviz amatorilor care nu au citit celelalte volume! Dacă vă apucaţi doar de volumul ăsta, o să aflaţi prea puţin despre unele personaje - care sunt descrise mai pe larg în primele volume, şi ce fel de aventuri au trăit - şi apoi veţi fi tentaţi să vă plîngeţi că volumul nu e prea-prea şi o să daţi 2 stele. Nu e frumos! :))
Frederick Pohl's "Gateway" series is deservedly well known and this book offers another adventure in that created universe. It would be easy to be too critical of this book; it falls short of Pohl's usual standard and, oddly, his artificial intelligences often seem to offer more personality and depth than his organic characters in this particular work. If you are a science fiction reader, however, it is well worth reading.
In this sixth volume of the Heechee saga Pohl closes the storyline in an interesting and excinting book. Action-packed, sometimes a little bit overcomplicated and hard to follow, but still a great read for any SF fan...
The Boy Who Would Live Forever is a sequel to the Heechee books that takes place in the same universe, but involves mostly new characters. The main characters, Stan and Estrella, are humans that move to the Core, the Heechee homeland. While the story does eventually involve a little bit of plot and conflict, it's really mostly a series of loosely-connected vignettes of human life in Pohl's far-future. Because of time dilation, tens of thousands of years pass outside the Core over the course of the story, but rather than detail the tides of human civilization, the author uses this to obscure what the rest of humanity is doing, because the characters cannot possibly keep track. On the whole, this was a pleasant read, but it didn't really show more present anything new or intriguing. show less
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Frederik Pohl was born in New York City on November 26, 1919. More interested in writing than in school, he dropped out of high school in his senior year and took a job with a publishing company. After serving as a public relations officer in the United States Army from 1943 to 1945, he returned to publishing as copywriter for Popular Science, a show more literary agent for several sci-fi writers, and the editor for the magazines Galaxy and If from 1959 until 1969, with If winning three successive Hugo awards. His first published work, a poem entitled Elegy to a Dead Satellite: Luna, was printed in Amazing Stories magazine in 1937 under the pen name Elton Andrews. His first science fiction novels were published in the mid 1960's, some written in collaboration with other writers, others created alone. During his lifetime, he won over 16 major awards for his writing (much of which was published pseudonymously) including six Hugo Awards and three Nebula Awards. His works include Gateway, which won the Campbell Memorial, Hugo, Locus SF, and Nebula Awards, Beyond the Blue Event Horizon, and Jem, which won the National Book Award in 1979. He also embraced blogging in his later years, using his online journal as an ongoing sequel to his autobiography, The Way the Future Was. He died on September 2, 2013 at the age 93. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Canonical title
- The Boy Who Would Live Forever
- Original publication date
- 2004
- People/Characters
- Wan
- Dedication
- To Ian Ballantine
- Publisher's editor
- Frenkel, James
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- Members
- 459
- Popularity
- 66,187
- Reviews
- 9
- Rating
- (3.31)
- Languages
- Czech, English, Hungarian, Romanian
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 8
- ASINs
- 3






























































