Pulse en una miniatura para ir a Google Books.
Cargando... Slant (1997)por Greg Bear
Ninguno Cargando...
Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Slant, is a aequel to Queen of Angels, but, I would say, is much less ambitious and also a much better book. Policewoman Mary Choy is back, after a few life changes (divorce, move from LA to Seattle, job change). When she's called on to assist in an investigation of sex workers killed through botched back-alley nanotech operations, she does not expect to be launched into a far-reaching conspiracy to bring down society. But a billionaire investor's mysterious suicide, a virtual-reality murder, and an unprecedented epidemic of mental disturbances and general crime all seem to be somehow related... With diverse characters that include a has-been porn star, a scientist with self-induced Tourette's syndrome, a renegade AI, and a heist mastermind without a past, Bear discusses many of the same themes as in the previous book, but in the context of a complex, entertaining and action-filled novel. High time for a quick read, I headed to the science fiction section at the used bookstore and picked up Slant, as Greg Bear has made it onto my list of trusted authors. Despite that, the first noteworthy thought I had reading this book was "Please, dear Greg, no more writing sex scenes!" I was a tad concerned when sex/porn turned out to be rather central to the plot, but the most cringe-worthy moment had passed and I was soon absorbed by the story. Basic idea -- it's 60ish years in the future. The internet dominates modern life. It has advanced to allow direct plug-ins that let the user see, fell, etc. the experiences of others -- live or recorded. This has taken over the economy. Those who produce popular content make money, those who only consume struggle. Also important is that large sections of the population have been "therapied" -- destructive/non-functional brain circuits are physically repaired by nanites. I would not place this among Bear's strongest works, though there are many interesting ideas here. Commentary on the internet, elitism, runaway capitalism. Bear's female characters are starting to feel a little similar, but at least they're smart, powerful, and allowed to have relationships with each other, so I'll give him a pass for now. Give it a read if you're a fan of Greg Bear. If you haven't read him before, start with Darwin's Radio or Moving Mars. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
A novel on the impact of new technologies and the steps people take to avoid becoming their prisoner. The action centers on separatist militiamen who in the next century create a country of their own in Idaho. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
Debates activosNingunoCubiertas populares
Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
¿Eres tú?Conviértete en un Autor de LibraryThing. |
Lives of Love
This group of ten amazing female disciples of Meher Baba have much wisdom and experience of living with the Avatar. 309 $15.00
Kissed by God
(my childhood with Meher Baba) Charles Haynes first met Meher Baba in 1958. He was just eight years old. This beautiful gem of a book tells the stories of Charles' time with Baba and his inner experience of Baba. As he puts it so well, “Like a time capsule from the past, each story of Meher Baba opens in the present to release the fragrance of His love.” (from the Preface) 160
60 fotos $18.00
Upasni Maharaj
A Perfect Master of India “Conceived by Meher Baba. . . and written under his auspices, this spiritual biography of Upasni Maharaj is a gift to America, to the West, and to the world. As a clear and authentic guide to the unfolding of higher consciousness, the life story of this Perfect Master serves as an invaluable resource for the contemporary Western seeker, for it accurately portrays the many stages of high illumination as well as the forceful transformative processes that accompany them.” 555 $75.00
Meher Baba’s
Blue Bus Tours
Including never-before-seen photographs from the newly digitized Elizabeth Chapin Patterson Photo Archive, Meher Baba's Blue Bus Tours is a meticulously researched chronicle of Baba's travels in India with His Western and Eastern women disciples, beginning in December 1938 and ending in November 1941. 848
100 fotos $45.00
The Boys
In 1927, Meher Baba initially established only the Meher Ashram, which offered a full academic curriculum as well as instruction in spirituality. Just months after the ashram began, a number of boys began to lean much more towards the spiritual offering, which on many days was being given to them directly by their Spiritual Master, Meher Baba. 465 $25.00
Meher Baba’s Samadhi
Tales from The Beloved's Tomb Over the decades, countless thousands have traveled to India's Maharashtra State to honor or worship Avatar Meher Baba at His Samadhi in upper Meherabad.
This collection of stories includes some history of the Tomb-shrine itself, and an account of Meher Baba's interment seven days after dropping His physical body on Jan 31, 1969. 234 $20.00
Twenty Years with Meher Baba
Dr. Ghani was a childhood friend and neighbor of Merwan S. Irani, before he was known as Meher Baba. In 1920, after some years apart, he was reacquainted with Merwan and learned of his new name (meaning Compassionate Father), given to him by the growing group of people who recognized and respected him as a great spiritual personality. Meher Baba lovingly referred to Dr. Ghani as “Big Head 110 $12.00
The Silent Messenger
The Life and Work of Meher Baba Meher Baba's life and teachings move through Vedantism, Sufism, Christianity and Buddhism. Uniquely, Baba gave all this to the world whilst remaining silent for 44 years. 311 $23.95
He Gives the Ocean Stories of the Savak Kotwal Family's Life with Meher Baba Najoo was one of a few Baba lovers who spent much of her childhood growing up at Meherabad. Her father, Savak, longed so intensely to serve God, he took his wife, Nergiz, and their three children, Najoo, Hilloo, and Adi, to live with Baba in March 1940, when Najoo was twelve. 416 $20.00
I hate dystopias! Several sub-plots coalesce into a nano-nightmare of complexity: the bad guys are trying to create a shelter so they can ride out the eventual collapse of world civilization--which they are aiding and abetting, so they can reemerge from safety and then take over the world--in comfort. The writing and excitement deserve a 5* rating....but I hate dystopias.
The first two stories take place about the same time—but the next 2 seem to have been written out of sequence. Book 4, “Slant”, takes place about 3 or 4 years past the first book and even mentions Mars as a major focal point of human expansion. But this is where/when we learn of the mysterious world-wide society that controls much of the real world. Book 3, “Moving Mars”, even mentions this secret society, in passing.
The reference to Mars in “Slant” and to the secret society in “Moving Mars” hint at the preferred chronology. While the distinctly unsatisfying ending to “Slant” makes me wish I had read “Moving Mars” last—with its much more encouraging ending. ( )