Imagen del autor
107+ Obras 1,450 Miembros 34 Reseñas 3 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Damien Broderick is an Australian writer, editor and critical theorist who lives in San Antonio, Texas.
Créditos de la imagen: Barbara Lamar

Series

Obras de Damien Broderick

The White Abacus (1997) 98 copias
Godplayers (2005) 91 copias
The Black Grail (1986) 83 copias
The Dreaming Dragons (1980) 80 copias
Striped Holes (1988) 48 copias
Transcension (2002) 47 copias
Centaurus: The Best of Australian SF (1999) — Editor, Contributor — 41 copias
Judas Mandala (1982) 38 copias
Sorcerer's World (1970) 32 copias
K-Machines (2006) 30 copias
The Hunger of Time (2003) 24 copias
The Zeitgeist machine: A new anthology of science fiction (1977) — Editor; Autor — 22 copias
The dark between the stars (1991) 18 copias
The Sea's Furthest End (1993) 18 copias
Beyond the Doors of Death (2013) 16 copias
Under the Moons of Venus (2010) 10 copias
The Meek (2004) 8 copias
Zones (Moonstone) (1997) 7 copias
Stuck in Fast Forward (1999) 7 copias
Quipu (2005) 6 copias
The Qualia Engine (2009) 6 copias
The Beancounter's Cat (2011) 5 copias
A Man Returned (1965) 5 copias
All My Yesterdays (1964) 5 copias
The Magi (1982) 5 copias
A Tooth for Every Child (1985) 4 copias
The Womb (1998) 3 copias
Coming Back (1982) 3 copias
Jack and the skyhook (2003) 3 copias
Infinite Monkey (2000) 3 copias
Thy Sting 2 copias
Growing Up (1976) 2 copias
I'm Dying Here (2009) 2 copias
Dark Gray (2010) 1 copia
Fantastika (2014) 1 copia
Tao Zero 1 copia
The Interior 1 copia
various 1 copia
Resurrection 1 copia
Billenium 1 copia
Uncle Bones (2009) 1 copia
Human's Burden (2010) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Engineering Infinity (2011) — Contribuidor — 353 copias
The Cambridge Companion to Science Fiction (2003) — Contribuidor — 284 copias
The Mammoth Book of Apocalyptic SF (2010) — Contribuidor — 239 copias
Dreaming Down-Under (1998) — Contribuidor — 184 copias
The Mammoth Book of New Comic Fantasy (2005) — Contribuidor — 180 copias
The Mammoth Book of Time Travel SF (2013) — Contribuidor — 168 copias
The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year Volume Five (2011) — Contribuidor — 148 copias
Year's Best SF 16 (2011) — Contribuidor — 128 copias
El secreto del caos y otros relatos (1964) — Contribuidor — 128 copias
The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year Volume Four (2010) — Contribuidor — 127 copias
Eclipse 4: New Science Fiction and Fantasy (2011) — Contribuidor — 116 copias
Edges (1980) — Contribuidor — 102 copias
Perpetual Light (1982) — Contribuidor — 99 copias
The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy, 2011 Edition (2011) — Contribuidor — 94 copias
The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy, 2010 Edition (2010) — Contribuidor — 93 copias
Dogtales! (1988) — Contribuidor — 50 copias
Clarkesworld: Issue 100 (January 2015) (2015) — Contribuidor — 38 copias
The Stories: Five Years of Original Fiction on tor.com (2013) — Contribuidor — 38 copias
Alien Shores (1994) — Introducción; Contribuidor — 37 copias
The Year's Best Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy (1997) — Contribuidor — 27 copias
Metaworlds: Vol 1: Best Australian Science Fiction (1994) — Contribuidor — 25 copias
Agog! Fantastic Fiction (2002) — Contribuidor — 25 copias
Forever Shores (2003) — Contribuidor — 20 copias
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 33, No. 8 [August 2009] (2009) — Contribuidor — 17 copias
Polder: A Festschrift for John Clute and Judith Clute (2006) — Contribuidor — 13 copias
Dreamworks: Strange New Stories (1983) — Contribuidor — 12 copias
Urban Fantasies (1985) — Contribuidor — 9 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Miembros

Reseñas

Kinda fun to read other view on books that I always wanted to read.
 
Denunciada
davisfamily | 3 reseñas más. | Dec 11, 2022 |
I was traveling in Australia in 2000 &, as usual, I was looking for bks there that I might not be able to find where I usually live. So I found & I read one of Broderick's bks & learned that he lives in Melbourne. That lead to my arranging to meet him & interview him. He agreed & was a nice guy & the interview is incorporated into a movie of mine called "Don't Walk Backwards". B/c of this, I'll read everything by the guy I can find. Wch, in the US, ain't much. This one? Well, it's called "Sorcerer's World" wch immediately evokes the "Sword & Sorcery" genre wch only Samuel Delaney has ever pulled off in any way that interests me. SO, I've found Broderick's work uneven so far. Some of the bks just seem to be written for money, some seem to truly have a personality behind them. Damien told me that he was mainly writing science bks by the time I met him & I've never seen a single one of those. Of course, I cd start looking for things for sale over the internet & I cd also run out of money very, very quickly.. so I'll stick to used bk stores for now.… (más)
 
Denunciada
tENTATIVELY | Apr 3, 2022 |
My friend the God Ghanesh & I interviewed Damien Broderick at his home in Australia in June 2000 less than 2 yrs before this bk was published. The very slightly edited interview is online here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OhiGt9eJ9bw

In it, Broderick talks about nanotechnology & immortality & the Spike of rapid change, & the delusion of thinking that 'reality' is stable, etc.. This SF novel grows out of many of the same ideas.

I was more conscious than usual while I was reading it of how inter-related my reading circumstances were to the content of the bk. I'd just finished reading Pamela Sargent's "Watchstar" in wch a girl protagonist is facing her coming-of-age in an environment in wch a major shift is about to take place. Then I read this "in wch a girl protagonist is facing her coming-of-age in an environment in wch a major shift is about to take place." Simultaneously, I've been very slowly reading Theodore Draper's "The Roots of American Communism"'s discussion of the transition in the US from socialism to communism (another rite of passage).

There's been far more snow than usual in Pittsburgh, where I live, for 5 wks straight. As I started reading this, the snow melted & we've gone straight into Spring - this, in the middle of March - about a mnth earlier than usual. Even the record that I listened to twice while reading, "Africa - Witchcraft & Ritual Music", seemed to fit right in (even though I can't recall WHY right now).

Perhaps Broderick cd be put in a category similar to that of Greg Bear & Greg Egan. Hard science w/ an imagination leading to the grandiose & an eye for human detail. I was engrossed & entertained. It's always interesting for me when humans imagine paradigm shifts as over-the-top as they can & Broderick does a good job of that here in a way that sneaks up on the reader w/ various inter-related threads that all come together to share a common fate. Of course, this type of interweaving is a basic novelistic approach but a part of its writerly challenge, esp in SF, is to make the threads dramatically technically different for diversity. This is accomplished beautifully w/ protaganist Amanda's Mall contrasted w/ the Valley of the God of One's Choice contrasted again w/ the personal history of Magistrate Mohammed Abdel-Malik.

I admit to being rubbed a bit the wrong way when the killing of Abdel-Malik in the beginning is done by punks. It reminded me too much of an early scene in "Terminator" where punks threaten the newly-arrived-from-the-future nude Terminator (w/o knowing what they were getting into). Having been around punk since its inception & having never once witnessed punks acting in this way, it just seems like a perpetuation of prejudicial stereotypes.

Later, on p 43, Abdel-Malik is interviewed as prophesizing "Sooner or later, machines or tailored organisms will provide all our wants. We'll work only at jobs we choose to accept, as artists dream of doing." I'm fairly sure Broderick believes this (or at least hopes for it) but I don't at all. I prophesize that for every labor-saving device there'll be a human job of increasingly dreary tedium of maintaining & making the machines. It makes me think of automated phone answering labyrinths. A person calls to ask a question & gets routed thru a multiple-choice nightmare that takes entirely too long & doesn't answer the question. Then again, I'm open to reading Broderick's more optimistic version.

On p 70, I was amused by a continuation of this Abdel-Malik interview in wch Florida is mentioned:

"Q. Won't a planet of wealthy ageless people be conservative and terminally dreary, Florida forever?
A. Could be. That's a scary thought."

Nice touch - although cdn't he've picked Canberra instead?

P 288: "Does it matter that what I feel, the "I" who feels it, is no more than a rush of bytes in some memory space, some neural network inside an immense computer that, for all I know, might be in orbit around some star light-years distant [..:]" "Transcension" engages issues of what-constitutes-'reality' that're forever dear to my intellect (& forever unanswered questions). As for the quoted question? Yes, it does matter b/c every possibility is different. HOWEVER, it just may well be that after discovering ourselves to be "a rush of bytes in some memory space" to the distress of our possible illusion of ourselves as something else, a paradigm construct that we may feel more comfortable w/, we may then find that new construct to be equally as illusory ad infinitum. So, no worries, eh?

Good onya meatey!
… (más)
 
Denunciada
tENTATIVELY | otra reseña | Apr 3, 2022 |
This might've been the 1st Broderick bk I read. I was impressed. A SF author that I wasn't familiar w/ who had wit & ideas & some social consciousness.
 
Denunciada
tENTATIVELY | Apr 3, 2022 |

Listas

Premios

También Puede Gustarte

Autores relacionados

Estadísticas

Obras
107
También por
38
Miembros
1,450
Popularidad
#17,721
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
34
ISBNs
118
Idiomas
6
Favorito
3

Tablas y Gráficos