T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
525.1 | Its so sloowww!!!! | PENUTS::PENNINGTON | | Thu Sep 10 1987 14:13 | 6 |
| I didn't bother to finish it. I took it back to the library as
it took me three weeks to get a little more than halfway through.
Books I like I can usually read in two or three evenings.
Frank
|
525.2 | It's all downhill from here ... | USMRW2::KSHERMAN | | Mon Sep 14 1987 12:37 | 9 |
| I guess Pohl has an impossible problem: what do you do after you've
written not only the best book of your career, but one of the best
SF books ever ("Gateway")? In creating a series of Heechee books,
Pohl did the understandable, but doomed to be disappointing, thing.
The Heechee were much more exciting as unexplained entities.
KBS
|
525.3 | It's not the Heechee's fault | GRAMPS::BAILEY | quoth the raven, nevermind | Thu Sep 17 1987 13:05 | 13 |
| I didn't like "Annals..." as much as I did the first three books.
Pohl got a little too "cutsie" with his main character, and he
tended to ramble through the story to the point where I nearly
put the book down without finishing it. I like some of his ideas
about life in "gigabit space" though, and I still found the Heechee
to be delightful, especially a young one trying to fit in with
human children.
Overall, I'd say it's worth reading but is a little disappointing
by comparison with it's predecessors.
... Bob
|
525.4 | Disappointing | BMT::MENDES | Free Lunches For Sale | Wed Sep 30 1987 01:11 | 12 |
| I thought "Gateway" was an instant classic, the second book a slight
come-down, the third a bit more of a come-down, and "Annals" very
disappointing. Everything was too neatly resolved. In "Gateway",
the sidebars added tremendously to the background and the pacing.
In "Annals", with its dual time tracks ("meat" time vs. "gigabit
space" time), there was nothing to perform a similar function.
While I only finished it at DECWorld, I had to go back to review
the very end. Either my brain is going fast, or it really wasn't
all that memorable.
Richard
|
525.5 | Sick of being called meat.. | MARX::TASCHEREAU | Whatever it takes | Wed Sep 30 1987 09:15 | 5 |
| RE: last
I couldn't agree with you more.
-Steve
|
525.6 | | DEADLY::REDFORD | | Mon May 09 1988 19:21 | 70 |
|
by Frederick Pohl
Del Rey SF, hardcover edition March '87, paperback May '88
The fourth and slowest book of the Heechee Saga. Pohl's nebbish
hero, Robinette Broadhead, is now dead. Fortunately, his immense
wealth and Heechee technology have been able to preserve his
soul as a computer program. He lives in a simulated world, and
even has a simulation of his simulated science advisor, Albert
Einstein. He goes to cocktail parties with other simacrula, and
doesn't even like to deal with meat people any more, since
they live so slowly by comparison.
Meanwhile, a watch station has been set up outside the kugelblitz
(a black hole made of energy instead of matter) to watch for
the emergence of the Assasins, energy beings who wish to return
the universe to a state close to the Big Bang. It's manned
jointly by telepathic Heechee and humans. The Assasins are
obviously far more powerful than even the Heechee, and they have
destroyed civilizations before, so the watch station can only
hope to get some kind of warning off before being obliterated.
The story follows some Heechee and human children on the watch
station when the first signs of activity occur, and follows
Broadhead as well.
The first Heechee Saga book, "Gateway" was interesting, and the second,
"Beyond the Blue Event Horizon" was excellent. But this is now
the fourth book about Robinette Broadhead, and he is, well, a dork. He
whines a lot, and seems to need everything explained to him.
Much of this book seems to be occupied by his whining, and I
confess that I skipped ahead when nothing had happened by page 120.
The theme of the book seems to be what a wonderful life a
simacrulum would lead, but this seems to me to be a bogus idea. Let
me flame on this for a bit because it seems to be coming up in
more and more novels ("True Names", for one). In a simulated
world anything is possible. You can live forever, in any
environment, with no fear of injury or death. You can experience
any adventure, any level of sensory pleasure, any kind of romance
or excitement. Heaven! There are only a couple of drawbacks.
One is that someone has to pay for all your hardware. You no longer
have anything to contribute. Any particular skills or experience
that you used to have can be separated from your main program and
run independently. If they can pour your consciousness into a
program, then presumably they can split off any part of you
that's economically valuable.
That's one example of a deeper problem. If all you are is bits,
then where is the you? You feel yourself as being conscious, and
can remember having a history, but how do you know it's really
yours? If your environment can be simulated, so can your memories.
Of course, that could be our situation today; we could all be
processes on God's 8800. But we seem to be localized in time and
space. In a computer simacrulum you might not even be the main
copy of your code - there could be hundreds of you around. You
could be stopped and started, copied to other systems, or merged with
other simacrula, and you would never know it. There's nothing
that's uniquely you anymore. Now, some mystics long to merge
with the Oversoul, and this might be just as good. As for
myself, if there's no longer a me then that looks a lot like death.
One last thing. The human world is vastly simpler than the real
world. All that we create or know are pale shadows of
what's out there. Imagine being trapped in a library forever.
You could see pictures of flowers but never touch the real thing.
You could write commentaries on the books there, but not add
anything new to them. Heaven? Probably not.
/jlr
|
525.7 | 1 Gigabit = 119.2 Megabytes | CSC32::S_LEDOUX | The kernel mode commando | Tue May 17 1988 21:03 | 8 |
| With all the 'computer people' at DEC, I'm surprised that nobody's
complained about how cramped 'gigabit space' is. I mean, gee,
seems like robin should've bought an 8840 with 512 MB, he'd think
its a palace. Robins 'gigabit' space contained only 119+ MB per
gigabit. I know suspension of disbelief is a prereq for SF but,
I still felt insulted everytime I read 'gigabit'.
Scott.
|
525.8 | The Least of the Problem | IND::MENDES | Free Lunches For Sale | Sat May 21 1988 01:10 | 6 |
|
Re .7, I agree that gigabit space seemed rather constrained. If
that were all I found fault with, it would have bothered me a lot
more.
- Richard
|
525.9 | | KACIE::SANDER | No CLD's please | Thu Jun 09 1988 17:25 | 2 |
| Don't forget the parity and ecc bits...
|
525.10 | Not bad, but not great either. | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Mon Jun 13 1988 20:10 | 16 |
| Somehow the 'gigabit' space didn't bother me nearly as much a
Broadhead's continual insistance on being 'gloopy', deliberately
ignoring important information his companions were trying to give
him, and in general acting like a very childish spoiled brat. I
was continually reminded of Thomas Covenant....
The other thing that bothered me was the way he played games with
the time differential. He seemed to talk about milliseconds somewhat
the same way we talk about minutes, but it wasn't terribly consistant,
and I could never get a good handle on how long things took.
However, (maybe because I've been reading such dreck lately), I
did stay up late a few nights reading it, and I'd give it about
a 5 on the Willie Scale.
Willie
|
525.11 | | DOOBER::MESSENGER | An Index of Metals | Tue Jun 14 1988 19:57 | 7 |
| Well, I liked it -- but maybe because it put the series to bed.
I think the constant reference to 'gigabit space' was not literally
a gigabit, but like William Gibson's cyberspace: a consentual reality
formed by a network of very large (by today's standards) computer
systems / AI's.
- HBM
|
525.12 | | ARCANA::CONNELLY | Aack!! Thppft! | Wed Oct 20 1993 23:04 | 16 |
|
I made one try at reading this book but couldn't make much headway. Given
the other responses in this string, maybe that's not surprising.
"Gateway" was very good. "Beyond the Blue Event Horizon" was good but had
kind of a rushed feeling toward the end. "Heechee Rendezvous" dawdled around
for a lot of the first half and then got rushed again toward the end. "Annals
of the Heechee" started off seeming like it was going to dawdle a lot (i can
only guess that Fred was going to rush to tie everything up again at the end).
This was the same type of pattern i saw in Herbert's "Dune" novels (before i
gave up reading the sequels). The first one was consistently good, the second
OK but started to show signs of stumbling around by the author, and the rest
just went downhill from there. Maybe a marker of "creeping sequelitis".
- paul
|