Nano Comes to Clifford Falls: And Other Stories
by Nancy Kress
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The title story, like most of the other pieces, is character-centered as a single mother wrestles with high-tech taking over her town. "Patent Infringement" is a fine if brief epistolary story on the subject; "The Most Famous Little Girl in the World" is the story of the lifelong friendship of two women set against a background of alien contact. "First Flight" is an affectionate homage to the classic Tom Corbett, Space Cadet TV show of the 1950s. "To Cuddle Amy" is a powerful short-short show more horror story about disposable children. "My Mother, Dancing" deals with a human race called on to seed with life a completely barren universe. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
Man, I am in love with Nancy Kress. The woman can write no wrong. In this latest collection, she once again displays the mastery of the short story. While her novels are good, her short stories are great.
My favorite of the collection was "Mirror Image". Filled with a universal scale of wonder, the story links the lives of five sister-selves; inter-connected beings in a post human galaxy intertwined by an all knowing membranous A.I. At the same time of overwhelming scientific insights, Kress floods the story with familial hopes and love.
Also to be noted is the story "Patent Infringement". Simultaneously hilarious and frightening, this brief tale is composed of a series of memos between an exec and a lawyer of a large drug company show more fighting the claims from an ordinary guy, that the corporation stole his genetic information for developing it's new super-drug.
While I mentioned these two stories in particular, I must note that every story is worth the price of admission. Kress has put together another profound work. show less
My favorite of the collection was "Mirror Image". Filled with a universal scale of wonder, the story links the lives of five sister-selves; inter-connected beings in a post human galaxy intertwined by an all knowing membranous A.I. At the same time of overwhelming scientific insights, Kress floods the story with familial hopes and love.
Also to be noted is the story "Patent Infringement". Simultaneously hilarious and frightening, this brief tale is composed of a series of memos between an exec and a lawyer of a large drug company show more fighting the claims from an ordinary guy, that the corporation stole his genetic information for developing it's new super-drug.
While I mentioned these two stories in particular, I must note that every story is worth the price of admission. Kress has put together another profound work. show less
I read three of the stories, "Nano Comes to Clifford Falls," "Patent Infringement," and "Computer Virus," (about 70 pages out of 324 before quitting. The plots kept my attention and the technological speculation was interesting, but I gave it up because there was no connection to the characters. I think this may have been because there is little detail nor sensory description to draw the reader into the characters' world.
However, I wanted to finish the stories that I read, and I enjoyed Kress's notes on the writing of each story.
However, I wanted to finish the stories that I read, and I enjoyed Kress's notes on the writing of each story.
This is what sf could--and should--be.
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Belongs to Publisher Series
Golden Gryphon (54)
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Contains
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 2008
- First words
- I was weeding the garden when nanotech came to my town.
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- 95
- Popularity
- 334,466
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.63)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 1





















































