T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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545.1 | Perelandra & Malacandra | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Just a trick of the light. | Tue Nov 24 1987 11:32 | 24 |
| Two of my favorite worlds are Perelandra and Malacandra (the "native"
names for Venus and Mars in C. S. Lewis's space trilogy). Later
astronomical observations have made both descriptions obsolete,
but that's a standard risk in SF. These worlds can't be the real
Mars and Venus, but they are reasonable in and of themselves, and
both interesting and beautiful.
Malacandra (Mars) is mostly red desert, but criss-crossed by a network
of miles-deep canyons. At the surface, the air is too thin to support
life, and the place is inhospitably cold, but down in the canyon
system, geothermal heat keeps things cozy and the air pressure is
adequately high. There is plenty of plant and animal life, including
three separate intelligent species. This system of canyons is,
of course, the famous Martian canal system, and was created by the
three Martian races when their planet was rendered uninhabitable
during an interplanetary war.
Perelandra (Venus) is covered in clouds and, beneath the clouds,
covered in ocean. Enormous, thick mats of vegetation float on the
ocean like movable, flexible islands, and support forests and "land"-
living creatures, including a race of green humanoids. The place
is like a fluid, polychromatic Polynesia.
Earl Wajenberg
|
545.2 | | VIDEO::GUENTHER | | Tue Nov 24 1987 12:40 | 7 |
| re: .0
As far as size goes, Orbitsville( in the book by the same name by
Bob Shaw) is much larger than Ringworld. It is a Dyson sphere -
a globe 93 millions miles in diameter.
/alan
|
545.3 | A few more | AD::REDFORD | | Tue Nov 24 1987 17:37 | 62 |
| There's "Mission of Gravity", of course, by Hal Clement. It's
the canonical book of planet-building, and is about
a planet, Mesklin, whose spin is so high that
centrifugal force almost cancels
gravity at the equator. Gravity ranges from 3 Gs at the equator to
800 Gs at the poles, with accompanying changes in wildlife,
weather, culture, etc..
There's "Dragon's Egg" by Forward, which discusses life on a hot
new neutron star. Get interesting effects when a trillion gauss
magnetic field crosses a billion G gravitional one, but for some
reason Forward put a fairly ordinary ecology into it.
Niven has built a lot of interesting planets, and in fact it looked
for a while like he was systematically working through geographies.
He had a planet whose only inhabitable area was a mountaintop,
one where you could only live in a canyon, one with seaonsal,
super-hurricane force winds, one with light gravity, one with heavy,
and so on. His recent novels "The Smoke Ring" and "The Integral Trees"
are set in a habitable zero-gee gas cloud orbitting around a binary
star.
Actually, I think Niven slipped up in creating Jinx. The force of
gravity on a planet must always be perpendicular to the
surface, or else things will roll in the direction of the tilt.
(Local exceptions like mountains can exist, of course). A planet
is like a huge water droplet - it will conform to the shape that
minimizes potential energy. You can't have parts that stick up out
of the atmosphere, because those parts will tend to fall towards
the lower areas. You can have non-spherical planets if some other
force besides the planet's own gravity is operating (see Mesklin above),
but the air pressure should be the same everywhere.
re: "Orbitsville"
Shaw is the only one I can think of who has really exploited the idea
of Dyson spheres. There's a mention of them in Fritz Leiber's
"The Wanderer" (where starlight is about to go out because all
the stars in the galaxy have been coated), and there's a series of
pulp adventures called Cageworld (where the solar system gets dismantled
and turned into shells), but I can't think of any others. Perhaps
the scale of civilizations needed for such projects are daunting
to writers. It's easier to imagine a few God-like beings creating
planets than it is to think of the trillions of people you would have
in such an environment. Multiply the diversity of the Earth by a
thousand and you still wouldn't fill one of these structures.
Aside from worlds that are interesting because of their physics,
I think Jack Vance does the best job of creating vivid and colorful
planets. There's Tschai, the subject of the "Planet of Adventure"
series, with four distinct alien races and their modified human
subjects. There's the world of "Big Planet", where the lack of
heavy elements means that an Earth-like planet can be 12,000 miles
across with an acceptable gravity. Hundreds of cultures can flourish
without ever coming into contact, and Vance describes a few.
There's "The Blue World", where people live on mats of seaweed on the
endless ocean and have to extract iron from their own blood. There's
Pao, where language determines culture, or Iszm where people grow
semi-sentient houses from seeds. Vance was a merchant seaman,
and his cosmopolitanness shows.
/jlr
|
545.4 | majipoor | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Nov 24 1987 17:55 | 28 |
| re .3:
> Actually, I think Niven slipped up in creating Jinx...
> You can have non-spherical planets if some other force besides the
> planet's own gravity is operating...
.0> ...Jinx. It is a very massive world pulled by tidal forces into
.0> the shape of an egg by the super-jovian planet that it orbits.
> You can't have parts that stick up out of the atmosphere, because
> those parts will tend to fall towards the lower areas.
> ...but the air pressure should be the same everywhere.
gee, I wonder why those guys need oxygen masks to climb Everest.
And then there is Silverberg's Majipoor. A very large low density
planet, so that the surface gravity is close to 1G but the surface
area is huge. He also has a mountain high enough to stick out of
the atmosphere, which is where the king's castle is located, and
the atmosphere is maintained artificially.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
545.5 | I feel like I'm Jinxed.... | SSDEVO::BARACH | Smile and act surprised. | Tue Nov 24 1987 18:31 | 33 |
| Thanks for coming to the defense of a fine world, Mr. SM. ;-)
Let me lay Jinx to rest, because .3 has a valid point re: atmosphere holding
the same shape as the planet.
Jinx orbits a huge gas giant named Primary or Binary that makes Jupiter look
like a wimp. In the far past, Jinx orbited much closer than it does "today".
It was deformed into a "egg" shape by tidal forces.
Now the difference between the long and short axes are only on the order of
600 miles. Jinx's size is not mentioned, except in a vague manner as being six
times "bigger" than earth. I took this to be six times more massive. If
true, I would guess Jinx "on the average" to be about twice the diameter of
Earth, or 16,000 miles. The "out-of-shape" difference is not too extreme (I
think?).
In any case, Jinx was formed, cooled, and moved away from Primary. Since it
didn't have as many radioactives as Earth did to warm the crust it solidified
slightly out of shape before it moved out (not sure if this is real or
hand-waving science). Thus, at Jinx's present orbit, the atmosphere and
hydrosphere have resumed more or less spherical shape while the planet is
still (slightly) egg-shaped, giving us the Ends and the Ocean.
>>>WHEW!<<<
As a side note, Niven's source for his planets seems to be "Habitable
Planets for Man" an excellent book by Steven Dole. I have been searching for
this book for 13 years, and am quite happy to have recently discovered it. It
goes through all the requirements that humans need to survive and the
probabilities for these happening among the nearby stars (data circa 1970).
=ELB=
|
545.6 | RE 545.3 | DICKNS::KLAES | This place has got everything! | Tue Nov 24 1987 18:35 | 11 |
| That's what always got me about Forward's culture on the neutron
star: Here you have an incredible environment almost totally unlike
Earth even in the rate of time, yet the beings on it are little
more than slugs who act like humans! Then again, maybe that is
exactly what Forward wanted, though I was rather disappointed.
One of the most fascinating SF worlds to me is Solaris, the
planet/being. Now *there* was a truly alien environment/creature.
Larry
|
545.7 | Greg Bear's "Eon" | BIRKA::MR_LITBY | P-O Litby, SWAS/Services Stockholm | Wed Nov 25 1987 09:03 | 32 |
|
My vote will have to go to the world created by Greg Bear in his
novel "Eon". Originally a large asteroid, picked up in the
asteroid belt, it is converted to a spaceship by excavating seven
large chambers inside. Some of the chambers contain cities,
communicating with each other via a subway system, running in
tunnels excavated under the chamber floors. The (cylindrical)
chambers are connected at the ends by tunnels.
And the seventh chamber goes on forever. Through some
technological wizardry, some wonderful machinery has been created
and put in the sixth chamber of this asteroid/spaceship (which was
called "Thistledown" by its creators, "the Stone" by the Earthmen
who discovered it). This machinery, apart from acting as inertial
damping for everything in the asteroid, has created and maintains
"the Way" - the corridor that makes the seventh chamber go on
forever.
A tube-formed singularity (it goes without saying that a corridor
like that has to have a point where all physics go haywire) runs
along the entire Way and is used as transportation link by
"Flawriders" gliding on it.
On regular intervals along the Way, "gates" have been opened to
other universes - so the Way is used as a point of commerce by
several different worlds.
If you haven't read the book already, don't miss it!
-- POL
|
545.8 | Arrakis | IND::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Wed Nov 25 1987 14:07 | 1 |
|
|
545.9 | good flight, chothmates | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | I took my hands off the wheel | Wed Nov 25 1987 14:12 | 2 |
| Avalon, the Ythrian-human joint colony in Poul Anderson's "People
of the Wind" and "The Earth Book of Stormgate".
|
545.10 | still more on Jinx | AD::REDFORD | | Wed Nov 25 1987 17:09 | 20 |
| Jinx may have originally formed in an egg shape, but it wouldn't stay
that way. For that matter, Earth mountains that are only six miles
high eventually fall down. On Jinx, the Ends are effectively
mountains 600 miles high. The lateral forces at the base of
such a 'mountain' would be enormous. The rock would ooze out until
it settled into a lower energy configuration.
Look at this another way. The potential energy of 1 kg of rock
at an End would be:
E = 600 miles x 2 Gs ~= 20 million joules / kg
By rolling a tonne of rock from an End to the Middle, you could
generate about 5000 kilowatt-hours of energy. By rolling 200
tonnes of rock an hour (large steam shovel rates) you could generate
a billion watts, the capacity of a large nuclear power plant.
There's a LOT of energy tied up in that kind of bulge, and it would
not stay there for billions of years.
/jlr
|
545.11 | Okay, I give... ;-) | BISON::BARACH | Smile and act surprised. | Wed Nov 25 1987 17:35 | 1 |
|
|
545.12 | Another Niven world | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | The Dread Pirate Roberts | Thu Nov 26 1987 01:08 | 3 |
| The Puppeteer Rosette.
--- jerry
|
545.13 | Mesklin, "Hothouse" Earth, and I forgot | GCANYN::MACNEAL | Big Mac | Mon Nov 30 1987 10:38 | 18 |
| I just finished "Mission of Gravity" and I too found Mesklin and
its inhabitants to be fascinating.
I am currently reading Brian Aldiss' "Hothouse" about an Earth set very
far in the future. The Sun is in the process of expanding and then
dying out. The Earth's rotation has stopped with respect to the sun so
that one side is always illuminated and the other is always in
darkness. Because of the catastrophic climatic changes, plants are the
dominant life form. Small tribes of humans still exist on the lit
side, but due to radiation induced mutations, are basically primitives
1/5 the physical size of 20th century man.
I have drawn a blank on the source of another interesting world - the
book is sitting in a bookcase at home. The world has one river and all
of the people that ever lived on earth now populate this world. Noone
can die, they simply relocate to another area of the world. Food,
tobacco, drugs, and liquor is provided by mushroom shaped objects
placed along the river's banks.
|
545.14 | re -.1 | BMT::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Mon Nov 30 1987 10:54 | 1 |
| "Riverworld" - Phillip Jos� Farmer
|
545.15 | | SOFTY::HEFFELFINGER | Tracey Heffelfinger, Tech Support | Mon Nov 30 1987 12:13 | 6 |
| Aldiss's "Hothouse" is also published under the name "The Long Afternoon
of Earth". One may be a short story while one is a novel, but
it's the same core story.
tlh
|
545.16 | I remembered | GCANYN::MACNEAL | Big Mac | Mon Nov 30 1987 12:58 | 5 |
| You are right, Tracey. "Hothouse" is the novel.
Thanks for the creator of Riverworld, but the actual title was "To Our
Scattered Bodies Go". I believe Farmer wrote a couple of sequels to
this as well.
|
545.17 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | The Dread Pirate Roberts | Tue Dec 01 1987 02:38 | 8 |
| Actually, HOTHOUSE is the British title while THE LONG AFTERNOON
OF EARTH is the American title.
re:.16
Farmer wrote five other Riverworld books.
--- jerry
|
545.18 | Nit | CAADC::GREGORY | Don Gregory @ACI | Wed Dec 02 1987 18:06 | 3 |
| re .16
_To *Your* Scattered Bodies Go_, not *Our*
|
545.19 | Darkover wins for me | NOETIC::KOLBE | laughing on the outside... | Thu Dec 03 1987 17:59 | 10 |
|
What, no votes for Darkover or Pern? I especially like Darkover
with it's varied population of terrans,Cheri, telepaths and 'regular'
people. MZB gives this planet reality from the Hellers to the
dry towns.
Pern of course, has the dragons and the burning threads.
Closer to home - how about earth in Asimov's 'Caves of Steel' and
then Solaria and Aurora with their robots.
|
545.20 | I vote for Gaia | GRAMPS::BAILEY | Could this be industrial disease? | Tue Dec 08 1987 09:45 | 4 |
| What about Gaia, a living planet with a collective brain? Talk
about intelligent ecological planning!
... Bob
|
545.21 | | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Just a trick of the light. | Tue Dec 08 1987 09:54 | 1 |
| In what story does Gaia appear?
|
545.22 | | WCSM::PURMAL | Oh, the thinks you can think! | Tue Dec 08 1987 12:10 | 6 |
| re: .21
Gaia appears in the trilogy consisting of "Titan", "Demon",
and "Wizard" by John Varley.
ASP
|
545.23 | not exactly a _planet_ | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Dec 08 1987 12:10 | 12 |
| re .21:
The Varley trilogy:
Titan, Wizard, Demon
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
545.24 | More on Varley's Gaia | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Just a trick of the light. | Tue Dec 08 1987 13:21 | 15 |
| Re .22
Oh, THAT Gaia. It's hard to place the name, since it's just the
Greek word for "Earth" and/or the Earth-mother goddess. I read
most of Varley's trilogy and it was indeed interesting. His Gaia,
in case you're wondering, is more like a space-station than a planet.
It's a roughly toroidal object orbiting Saturn, several milesin
diameter. It is a single organism, with other organisms living
inside it. The thing is intelligent and has been picking up our
radio and TV broadcasts for years. It also designs new organisms
and species for the fun of it, so that when our heroes arrive some
time in the future, they find several races patterend after Terran
mythology -- centaurs and angels, for instance.
Earl Wajenberg
|
545.25 | Asimov -> Gaia -> Galaxia -> sequel | GRAMPS::BAILEY | Could this be industrial disease? | Tue Dec 08 1987 15:35 | 6 |
| Uh, I was thinking about the Gaia in the last two Foundation novels.
You know the one that grows up to become Galaxia? That is most
definitely a planet. At least for now...
... Bob
|
545.26 | | AD::REDFORD | | Tue Dec 08 1987 17:46 | 6 |
| I'm afraid I didn't finish Varley's trilogy. Did he ever get
around to saying what these planet-creatures were for? Why someone
went to all the effort to design them? It all seemed a bit whimsical,
in the sense that Gaia could create anything she wanted to, so there
was no reason for any of her creations.
/jlr
|
545.27 | | SIMUL8::RAVAN | | Tue Dec 08 1987 23:06 | 10 |
| Re .26:
What they were *for*??? What are *we* for???
They were living beings, and as such were as whimsical as could
be expected. Besides, Gaia was reaching the age when her race began
to go mad, so her "whimsy" was becoming some sort of paranoid
schizophrenia. No wonder things looked random...
-b
|
545.28 | | EXPRES::DFIELD | | Wed Dec 09 1987 07:17 | 8 |
|
How about the future world of Gibson shown in the neural equivalent
of an integrated computer network, Chiba city with its rogue doctors
making any physical alteration money can buy, and the gritty uban
decline of the sprawl. Not a place I'd like to live, but very
interesting just the same.
DanF
|
545.29 | Thinking Small | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Just a trick of the light. | Wed Dec 09 1987 09:18 | 21 |
| One world that caught my fancy was Hydrot, a planet of Tau Ceti
in "The Seedling Stars" by James Blish. We see very little of Hydrot
in the course of the story, though. Most of it is covered by ocean.
The only exception is a small, marshy continent.
It was colonized by a crash-landed team of genetic engineers. Their
last act before dying was to design the next generation of colonists.
Using a great deal of hand-waving, Blish tries to convince you that
(1) it is not feasible to design intelligent life for the oceans,
and (2) it IS feasible to design intelligent life for a puddle in
the marsh. I don't believe him for a moment, but the result is
facinating -- microscopic, rotifer-sized humanoids.
Also facinating are the "natives," the local popultion of protozoa,
which turn out to enjoy a stiff kind of collective intelligence
and ally with the humans against the local rotifera.
The plausibility of this world is just about zero, but for me it
really evoked the old sense of wonder.
Earl Wajenberg
|
545.30 | Wellworld | CAADC::GREGORY | Don Gregory @ACI | Wed Dec 09 1987 18:09 | 7 |
| Appearing for the first time in _Midnight at the Well
of Souls_, this world was used as a development/test
bed for the race that populated a (our? I don't think
so) universe with the successful species. MatWoS
was the first of a quintology (?) -- one of my favorite
"extended novels" -- and, I think, Chalker's first
of many.
|
545.31 | Songs of a Distant Earth | LDP::BUSCH | | Thu Dec 10 1987 10:57 | 17 |
| Re .29
It's been a while since I read it so I don't remember the details, but...
How about the mostly ocean planet (name?) that the colonists from a now
destroyed earth visit in Clark's "Songs of a Distant Earth". The whole planet is
covered by ocean except for a couple of islands, one of which is volcanic. The
"natives" are the decendents of embryos sent from Earth and cared for by robots
until they matured. They were sent to colonize space when it was learned that
the Sun was going to nova (in 3300 AD?). They are visited some 500 years later
by the last inhabitants of Earth who escaped just in time before the Earth was
destroyed. These visitors are just planning to stop over long enough to pick up
enough water to freeze into ablative shields for their space craft so it can
continue the journey to their final destination. During their stay, they DO
discover a marine (lobster like) life form which does seem to have an
intelligent society which it is feared may pose some threat to the natives at
some time in the future.
|
545.32 | Flux | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Dec 10 1987 17:17 | 13 |
| re .30:
Thanks for reminding me about Chalker.
My favorite is the world of "Flux and Anchor". Did he ever actually
name it?
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
545.33 | | AD::REDFORD | | Thu Dec 10 1987 18:20 | 9 |
| re: .27 - Varley's moon-creatures
I didn't mean that Gaia was whimsical, but that her creations were.
If you can create anything you want, it doesn't much matter what
you create. Also, I was under the impression that Gaia and her
sisters were designed by someone, perhaps as habitats.
Did Varley say they evolved on their own?
/jlr
|
545.34 | more Farmer | ANGORA::MLOEWE | Marvel of modern science | Fri Dec 11 1987 08:54 | 10 |
| Another Philip Jose' Farmer series no one mentioned yet is the "World
of the Tiers"
"The Makers of the Universe"
"The Gates of Creation"
"A Private Cosmos"
"Behind the Walls of Terra"
"The Lavalite World"
I thought these were very well executed and imaginatived.
Mike_L
|
545.35 | "to Paras Deval for the wedding!" | USAT02::CARLSON | ichi ni san shi go | Fri Dec 11 1987 12:11 | 10 |
| I like Fionavar from _The Summer Tree_ and _The Wandering Fire_
by Guy Gavriel Kay. (the Fionavar Tapestry fantasy series)
It includes a varied terrain, from the mountains, to the sea, to
the Forest that no man dares enter.
There are varied races and gods that intervene sometimes, to keep
the balance between dark and light.
Of course, there's magic abound!
Theresa.
|
545.36 | Another title | SUBTLE::ROUTLEY | Kevin Routley - VMS DEBUG | Fri Dec 11 1987 13:27 | 9 |
| < Note 545.29 by PROSE::WAJENBERG "Just a trick of the light." >
-< Thinking Small >-
> One world that caught my fancy was Hydrot, a planet of Tau Ceti
> in "The Seedling Stars" by James Blish. We see very little of Hydrot
Also known as "Surface Tension".
kevin
|
545.37 | a thought | ERASER::KALLIS | Remember how ephemeral is Earth. | Fri Dec 11 1987 13:57 | 5 |
| My favorite _developed_ world is Jach Vance's Big Planet (from a
novel of the same name). My favorite semi-developed world is Trenco,
in Doc Smith's Lensman Series.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
545.38 | Shadow | ANGORA::MLOEWE | Marvel of modern science | Fri Dec 11 1987 14:14 | 7 |
| Some other worlds that I've enjoyed are Roger Zelazny's Amber series.
All worlds are but shadows of Amber including our own Earth.
I'm currently looking for the one after "The hand of Oberon", but
I haven't had any luck locating it.
Mike_L
|
545.39 | RE 545.38 | DICKNS::KLAES | All the galaxy's a stage... | Fri Dec 11 1987 15:27 | 5 |
| Could you explain what you mean by all other worlds are but
"shadows" of Amber? Thanks.
Larry
|
545.40 | | MANANA::RAVAN | | Fri Dec 11 1987 16:11 | 14 |
| Re shadows: That's the definition of Amber - the place of which
all others are but shadows. (If you haven't read the books, try
at least the first one ("Nine Princes in Amber"); the concept of
shadow-walking is worth it all by itself.)
The "shadow" concept - basically, that anything you can find anywhere
in the universe has an "original" somewhere in Amber - reminded
me of Lewis' Narnia chronicles, in which the afterworld is rather
like that. Lewis' idea was that Heaven is the ultimate reality,
and this world is merely a dim reflection; sometimes glimmers of
wonder come through, but often it's obscured by evil deeds or
shortsighted people.
-b
|
545.41 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | The Dread Pirate Roberts | Fri Dec 11 1987 23:15 | 7 |
| re:.36 re:.29
Actually, the story about Hydrot is titled "Surface Tension",
while THE SEEDLING STARS is the name of the collection that
contains it.
--- jerry
|
545.42 | Amber and Chaos | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Just a trick of the light. | Sun Dec 13 1987 01:36 | 14 |
| Re .39 & .40
Amber is very like a Platonic archetype. It is the ideal, perfect
city, in the ideal, perfect world. All other cities and worlds
are "shadows" cast by Amber. The people in Amber are less than
ideal, but they are rather godlike and cast their own shadows into
the shadow-worlds. Our Earth is only one of a huge number of
shadow-worlds. At the far pole of reality from Amber stands (floats?
drifts?) the Courts of Chaos. Near Amber, the worlds are magical
in a medieval-fairy-tale way; near Chaos, they are magical in a
surrealistic way; presumably our world is in a relatively dull stretch
in between.
Earl Wajenberg
|
545.43 | An Inside Out Dyson Sphere? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Dec 29 1987 14:08 | 5 |
| Cuckoo, which is I believe the work of Poul Anderson and Jack
Williamson?
len.
|
545.44 | we *are* alone | RTOEU1::JPHIPPS | Can you feel it , Luke ? | Wed Dec 30 1987 06:28 | 4 |
| The planet Cricket - Douglas Adams
John J
|
545.45 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Lyra RA 18h 28m 37s D 31d 49m | Mon Jan 04 1988 15:42 | 7 |
| re:.43
That's Fred Pohl, not Poul Anderson.
I know, those Po{h,u}ls are all alike. :-)
--- jerry
|
545.46 | Have to Pay my Pohl Tax | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jan 06 1988 12:44 | 8 |
|
re .43, .45:
Right jerry, I realized that on the way home. Gee, if I just had
a cellular modem...
len.
|
545.47 | ...more... | THE780::MESSENGER | Things fall apart-it's scientific | Tue Feb 02 1988 20:36 | 12 |
|
How about:
o "Kobold", from _Protector_ (Niven) which is a toroid a few
miles across built by the Brennan-Monster (a protector stage human).
He "uses generated gravity as an art form". At the center of the
toroid is a circular lake... which can be reached by swimming up one side
of a bidirectional stream...
o Sagittarius A from _Gateway_, _Beyond the Blue Event Horizon_
and _Heechee Rendezvous_. The black hole where the Heechee live...
- HBM
|
545.48 | DEVA | DPD09::WISNIEWSKI | ADEPT of the Virtual Space. | Thu Feb 18 1988 00:20 | 10 |
|
Anyone remeber?
Robert Asprin's DEVA dimension from the MYTH series.
A collection of tents, storefronts, stalls, malls, and gambling
halls as far as the horizon. Each opening out into an Alternate
dimension for "STORAGE".
|
545.49 | I might be wrong, but ??? | RAVEN1::TYLER | Try to earn what Lovers own | Tue Feb 23 1988 01:18 | 7 |
| RE: -1
I though DEVA had the tents and so on, FROM every place, not TO
every place. It was the one door in the house (green door I think)
that went to other places.
Ben
|
545.50 | I love Chworktap | RAVEN1::ROSENBERG | won't get fooled again | Fri Dec 09 1988 16:55 | 7 |
| Nobody said anything all the worlds in Venus on a halfshell
(Kilgor[Kirt Vonnegut]Trout). Or Trafalmador from Slaghter house
five. Two of my all time favorite books.
R
R
|
545.51 | | FACVAX::BOYAJIAN | Millrat in training | Fri Dec 09 1988 18:37 | 8 |
| re:.50
VENUS ON A HALFSHELL was actually written by Philip Jos� Farmer,
not Kurt Vonnegut. Vonnegut did give permission to Farmer, though
he later regretted it when everyone started assuming that he was
the author.
--- jerry
|
545.52 | Farmer is now formally credited with creating VENUS | TALLIS::SIGEL | | Sat Dec 10 1988 22:47 | 11 |
| Re .51
> VENUS ON A HALFSHELL was actually written by Philip Jos� Farmer,
> not Kurt Vonnegut. Vonnegut did give permission to Farmer, though
> he later regretted it when everyone started assuming that he was
> the author.
That's probably the reason why the new paperback edition of the novel
has Philip Jos� Farmer as the author, not "Kilgore Trout".
Andrew
|
545.53 | honorable mention | WMOIS::M_KOWALEWICZ | Lamar Mundane from 35' ..swish | Wed Jan 25 1989 11:06 | 12 |
|
Dosadi was a very interesting world. From books by Herbert,
Whipping Star, The Dosadi Experiment, .... my memory fails but
I think there might be another book in this milieu.
mkowa
|
545.54 | My first new world | COOKIE::MJOHNSTON | MIKE.....(Dammit! Spock...) | Tue Jun 06 1989 14:37 | 8 |
| A vote for Barsoom.
Without this, I may never have gotten into SF.
Also, though not my overall favorites, Deathworld (H. Harrison)
and the world from Poul Anderson's `Fire Time'.
Mike
|
545.55 | My twopennyworth. | HEEP::PETTEFAR | | Fri Sep 01 1989 11:44 | 6 |
| The Adept world/s.
The Moon (by lots of authors).
Nick.
|
545.56 | David Edding's world! | STEREO::FAHEL | Amalthea, the Silver Unicorn | Fri Sep 01 1989 15:23 | 3 |
| The world of the Belgariad & the Mallorean.
K.C.
|
545.57 | In through the out door | POLAR::LACAILLE | Greasy fingers smearing shabby cl... | Fri Sep 01 1989 15:42 | 12 |
|
I guess three of my all time favorite world to be conjoured in
the mind of a SF author would be:
Herberts Dune
Tolkiens Middle Earth
Zelazny's Amber (although this included many)
Charlie
ps ...and although originally a Dant� creation,
Niven/Pournelles Inferno.
|
545.58 | slouching beasts | USMRM4::SPOPKES | | Wed Oct 04 1989 12:35 | 8 |
| My favorite world, as a world, is David Lindsay's world in "A Voyage
to Arcturus". I think his name is David. His world is truly wierd.
A close runner up is probably the earth in "Stars My Destination",
by Bester. I like what he did.
steve popkes
|
545.59 | | SUBURB::TUDORK | SKEADUGENGA | Sun Apr 01 1990 13:40 | 1 |
| Treason - Orson Scott Card
|
545.60 | I like the Ringworld, too. | FORTSC::KRANTZ | Simple as possible, but no simpler | Mon Apr 02 1990 06:07 | 6 |
|
Nobody has mentioned Leguin's Earthsea.
But my favorite is her Forest.
-- mikeK
|
545.61 | Hyperion | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Apr 02 1990 10:55 | 6 |
| Hyperion, from the book of the same name, by Dan Simmons.
And another vote for Ringworld.
len.
|
545.62 | I (heart) puns | RAVEN1::BUTKUS | Sniffing rancid buns of angels. | Wed Apr 04 1990 02:25 | 7 |
|
Most of you are probably going to go "oh god" but I think
the most interesting world would be Xanth.
M
B
|
545.63 | | USMRM3::SPOPKES | | Wed Apr 04 1990 17:29 | 7 |
| For those of you who like obscurity, the despairing earth in the Mark
S. Geston novels: Lords of the Starship, Out of the Mouth of the Dragon
and The Day Star.
Not that I would want to *live* there...
steve p
|
545.64 | | LUGGER::REDFORD | John Redford | Wed Apr 04 1990 18:58 | 10 |
| Re: .-1
Obscure, but favorites. Do you think they are all the same world?
"The Day Star" was set in a place where you could walk
upwind into Time along the Road into greater and greater worlds.
The other two were set in worlds ravaged by apocalyptic wars.
The tone of "Lords of the Starship" and "Out of the Mouth of the
Dragon" was similar, but I'm not sure that they shared anything else.
/jlr
|
545.65 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | That girl is poison... | Wed Apr 04 1990 22:03 | 10 |
|
Not exactly a world, but I kind of like Zelazny's
Roadmarks where the highway runs through time
with different exits for different periods.
Also, Amber is cool, Terry Brooks' Shannara world
and S. R. Donaldson's world is on the top of my
list (with Tolkein right up there as well, of
course)
|
545.66 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Secretary of the Stratosphere | Thu Apr 05 1990 04:46 | 8 |
| re:.64 re:.63
Yes, all three novels are set in the same world, though THE DAY
STAR was set much later then the other two. (I should note that
I haven't read these for almost 20 years, so details are hazy,
but I'm sure that they're all connected).
--- jerry
|
545.67 | | MXOV06::ZAJBERT | Imagination Is More Important Than Information | Thu Apr 05 1990 13:46 | 4 |
|
Maybe I'd rather vote for a shadow...
Mauricio
|
545.68 | | USMRM3::SPOPKES | | Tue Apr 17 1990 14:20 | 9 |
| re: .64, etc
All three were set in the universe of the day star, there are
references in the day star to the other two. I think there was a
reference to the evil empire whose name I have forgetten in Out of the
Mouth of the Dragon.
steve p
|
545.69 | Sounds interesting. | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Color Coagulated | Tue Apr 17 1990 16:13 | 5 |
| Re .64 & .68
Could you describe this Day Star universe more fully?
Earl Wajenberg
|
545.70 | | TJB::WRIGHT | Offended?? Don't Complain, Change the Chanel | Tue Apr 17 1990 17:45 | 11 |
|
not a world so much as a concept -
the cyberpunk concept of the matrix and machine space/machine reality.
Plug into the matrix/the net and it becomes your world, and unlike a
video game - it can kill you...
grins,
clark.
|
545.71 | | USMRM3::SPOPKES | | Fri Apr 20 1990 16:33 | 25 |
| re: -.1
I don't know what book the preceeding person read, but as far as I can
tell it was not Mark Geston's The Day Star
There is very little technology in the day star. The premise is the
universe is like a nautilus shell. Each chamber of the shell is a
world. The sun is the source of time which enters the univers through
the opening of the "shell" losing potency as it proceeds through the
shell until it reaches the last chamber. The last chamber is only
lightly touched by time.
The thread connecting all of these worlds is a road that the main
character walks to the center. Outside the "shell" are the forces of
chaos, which are unbridled time.
As far as I can remember, there is not a single computer in the entire
book, much less any video- or cyberspace.
Which makes sense in Geston's writing. One of his recurring themes is
not that technology itself is bad, but that the blind worship of
technology loses man his soul. He says this baldly in The Seige of
Wonder, which, I believe, is his last book.
steve p
|
545.72 | I'm off to see the Doral... | VAOA01::JSTEWART | RMS is a LAYERED PRODUCT... | Tue May 08 1990 21:57 | 4 |
| I kind of like the Twenty Universes in Glory Road... lots of room
and dragons I can believe in...
js
|
545.73 | ditto on Hyperion (minus the shrike) | CHFS32::HMONTGO | I feel a thought approaching | Sat Sep 15 1990 13:09 | 2 |
| I'll bet .70 is referring to one of the worlds in Hyperion...
|
545.74 | Quick, Punk, Hand me that Gibson... | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Thu Sep 20 1990 17:53 | 8 |
| re .73 re .70 - no, there is no cyberpunk notion of the "matrix" in
the Hyperion novels, though there is a very roughly analogous notion of
"artificial" intelligences interacting with reality. The stuff from
.70 sounds more likely to have come from W. T. Quick's novels (Dreams
of Flesh and Sand, etc.) or Walter Gibson's work (Neuromancer, etc.).
len.
|
545.75 | Would You Believe My Father's Name Is William Walter? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Fri Sep 21 1990 12:59 | 5 |
| re .74 re .74 re .70 - I think it's William Gibson. But then, I'm no
surer of that than I was of it being Walter.
len.
|
545.76 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Danger! Do Not Reverse Polarity! | Mon Sep 24 1990 05:24 | 6 |
| re:.75 re:.74
It's William Gibson. Walter Gibson was the man who created and wrote
The Shadow.
--- jerry
|
545.77 | Me, Gwynnedd, Keltia | CGVAX2::PRIESTLEY | | Wed Sep 23 1992 16:01 | 6 |
| My personal favorites are Katherine Kurtz' Gwynnedd and Patricia
Kenneally's Keltia, but only after the obligatory Middle Earth which is
the ultimate of fantasy/fiction worlds.
Andrew
|
545.78 | | HANNAH::REITH | Jim HANNAH:: Reith DSG1/2E6 235-8039 | Fri Oct 30 1992 10:03 | 1 |
| The Integral Trees and Smoke Ring
|