A Deepness in the Sky SF Masterworks Howard Hughes 9781473211964 Books
Download As PDF : A Deepness in the Sky SF Masterworks Howard Hughes 9781473211964 Books
A Deepness in the Sky SF Masterworks Howard Hughes 9781473211964 Books
I read this book the first time when it was first published and considered it a masterpiece of SF, with so many ideas and themes that it reallyNEEDED its 700+ pages. I am re-reading it again for my book group and am pleased to report that on re-reading I still feel the same way. EVERY SF fan should read this book.
BUT THIS TIME I read it on my kindle (for only $2.99 thanks to Matchbook pricing, since I bought my hardcopy edition from Amazon in 1999), and I cannot really recommend this book on Kindle without a warning. Like many books, this one switches scenes within the same chapter, e.g., from humans to the "Spiders". The hardcopy contains the conventional blank line that warns the reader of the shift. The Kindle format does not, and the reader is often brought up short as they realize something has changed. My immersion in Vinge's world is interrupted, and my enjoyment suffers.
If the publisher is listening, please reformat your ebook.
Prospective readers, DO get this book, but the choice of medium may be more difficult than usual.
Tags : A Deepness in the Sky (S.F. Masterworks) [Howard Hughes] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Deepness in the Sky,Howard Hughes,A Deepness in the Sky (S.F. Masterworks),GOLLANCZ,1473211964
A Deepness in the Sky SF Masterworks Howard Hughes 9781473211964 Books Reviews
This is the sort of novel that it's said can't win awards anymore science fiction where the science matters, plot and character come before any "message", and what ideological ax-grinding exists is smoothly made part of the plot and presents liberty of thought and action as a Good Thing.
It's set in the far future and the main action is spread over a century or so, with characters spending much of their time in cryo-sleep, living on huge starships, so it can be a little hard to relate to. Still, the characters' attempts to stay human and think about normal things like green space, art and family are central to the story. The action is split between the human spacers and the native "Spiders", who are sometimes jarringly human-like. Cleverly, though, Vinge implies that the Spider chapters look this way because of how the humans' translators work, and the anthropomorphism is crucial to the plot. Nicely done.
I came to this book without having read "A Fire Upon the Deep" and had no problems understanding it.
This is probably one of the greatest plotted novels in all of science fiction, even of fiction in general. Only Vinge could bring humanity to spiders on a far away world.
The book is gripping from beginning to end, spanning thousands of years in narrative. There are dozens of threads going on throughout the book and Vinge manages to keep them all clear and progressing to a very satisfying conclusion.
If you haven't read this book, you are missing out on the best science fiction has to offer, and one hell of an author.
I do recommend reading the first book in this series first. While it is not necessary from a plot angle (as the two stories take part thousands of years away from each other) one of the characters (sort of) in both is more appreciated if encountered in the first book first. The character is one of the best ever in science fiction. I won't say who it is.
This a typical Vinge book in that it's full of interesting concepts and characters, but the first 75% of this chewy, nutritious "meal" of a book requires that the reader literally slog through boredom and or apathy for most of the buildup to the end (I found myself often exiting my app to check FB or Twitter through the first half of the book because I felt so understimulated). THAT SAID, there's a whirlwind of twists and fruition of plans that will keep you glued to the last quarter of the book. I also like the way Vinge gives enough closure at the ends of his stories, but never totally explains or resolves some problems, nor does he give you so much closure that you stop wanting a little more story. I would personally recommend reading this story before A Fire Upon the Deep, as it's chronologically first in the Zones of Thought universe and helps create a better understanding of a few characters in the other books in the series.
“Humankind had often imagined, but never created a general assembler”. Nothing is easy in Vernor Vinge’s Qeng Ho universe. No short cuts are allowed, neither for science nor for humans or aliens. Golgothas have to be climbed, sacrifices have to be made, decades, centuries or even millennia have to crawl before dreams are realized or, more often than not, betrayed.
A Deepness in the Sky is science fiction at its very best with believable aliens and even more believable humans. The concepts are mind-boggling, the ideas are abundant and the culmination to the climax is a masterclass.
Vernor Vinge takes his time. 770 pages were needed to reveal, one after the other, the secrets and the evolution of an exotic, and not anthropomorphically bipedal alien civilization (remember, nothing is easy) along with the struggles of human space traders, their ruthless human opponents and the personal apotheosis of one of science fiction’s most intriguing characters, the one and only leader of the Queng Ho, Pham Nuwen.
A Deepness in the Sky is one of the rarest diamonds of science fiction which give the genre a good name.
This is the second book in the series and contains the prequel of Pham Nuwen adventures that lead up to his being found in the first novel.
The first novel gave us a species of alien that were a race of collective beings/intelligence. This one turns the bug war theme on its head and shows us a sympathetic species of arachnids. This species is being watched by group of Queng Ho and an antagonistic rival, the Emergent with the hopes the arachnids will develop the technology that will save the humans and allow them to go home.
Spanning over 40 years of objective time, Vinge spins one of the most imaginative SciFi stories I have ever encountered. We have vivid description of the advancing of an alien civilization, we have the back history of the Queng Ho and Pham Nuwen and the conflict between space faring cultures. Vernor Vinge is a mind boggling visionary.
I read this book the first time when it was first published and considered it a masterpiece of SF, with so many ideas and themes that it really
NEEDED its 700+ pages. I am re-reading it again for my book group and am pleased to report that on re-reading I still feel the same way. EVERY SF fan should read this book.
BUT THIS TIME I read it on my kindle (for only $2.99 thanks to Matchbook pricing, since I bought my hardcopy edition from in 1999), and I cannot really recommend this book on without a warning. Like many books, this one switches scenes within the same chapter, e.g., from humans to the "Spiders". The hardcopy contains the conventional blank line that warns the reader of the shift. The format does not, and the reader is often brought up short as they realize something has changed. My immersion in Vinge's world is interrupted, and my enjoyment suffers.
If the publisher is listening, please reformat your ebook.
Prospective readers, DO get this book, but the choice of medium may be more difficult than usual.
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