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Ventus (2001)

por Karl Schroeder

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

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5041448,539 (3.76)13
After terrifying and titanic struggles, a godlike artificial intelligence gone rogue has finally been destroyed. But not before it scattered seeds of itself throughout the galaxy. On the terraformed planet Ventus, benign AIs -- the godlike Winds - which shaped and guarded its transformation, have fallen silent. Calandria May is sent down to the surface where she quickly finds that an extension of the rogue AI, a cyborg called Armiger, has planted a strange and powerful device in a young man named Jordan Mason. Jordan has visions. He is desperate to find their meaning and source -- desperate enough to risk awakening the Winds, perhaps invoking the power that candestroy technology to protect the environment they created. Ventus is an epic journey across a fascinating planet with two big mysteries -- why have the Winds fallen silent? And is Armiger, or Jordan, carrying a Resurrection Seed?… (más)
  1. 00
    The Book of the New Sun por Gene Wolfe (Rouge2507)
    Rouge2507: Similar theme: a world full of ultra-advanced thechnology that the humanity do not understand anymore. Similar slow-paced atmosphere
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» Ver también 13 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 14 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
I actually read this some years ago. As I recall, it wasn't really my cup of tea. ( )
  Treebeard_404 | Jan 23, 2024 |
Enjoyable, though long-winded. File next to Iain M. Banks. Seems like Schroeder really wants to talk about some heavy philosophical ideas, realized through AI/material science--and that was the best part of the book. Wish he would have just come out with it. ( )
  jakecasella | Sep 21, 2020 |
Artificial intelligences go rogue and turn against the humans they're supposed to protect, and no one knows why. One of them, a human transformed by an AI so powerful that it's considered a god, rediscovers his humanity and has to find his own way.

This was a great story - an interesting theme and the singularity-problem explored from an unusual angle, combined with characters with interesting, but very personal problems. A reasonable amount of romance and tragedy mixed in made for a really satisfying read. It also contains one of the most disturbing depictions of someone being literally scared to death I've ever read.

If only... yes, if only the editing weren't that bad. I don't get it really, the book was published by TOR before it got a CC license, and I'd assume that a publisher of such reknown knows how to line edit, but this reads in parts - getting worse towards the end - like a first draft with jumbled words, redundant repetitions and whole sentences that make no sense at all. It's a shame, really. ( )
  DeusXMachina | Jan 7, 2019 |
I had seen some of Karl Schroeder’s books in the library before, but I never picked one up until now. I’m glad I finally did. This isn’t a great book. There are weak spots. The prose, grammar, and punctuation could be better, but the story is outstanding. This is an imaginative science fiction tale in a seemingly fantasy-like medieval setting. I like this kind of cross-genre mixing and use it in my own stories.
Two investigators from a technologically advanced intergallactic civilization are on Ventus searching for an agent of recently defeated malevolent “god.” They fear he can resurrect (or perhaps recreate would be a better word) this entity. They want to stop him from doing so. They recruit (essentially kidnap) a young local boy who they believe can locate this agent.
The inner turmoil experienced by some of the main characters is well conceived, if a bit sparse. The main investigator is driven to succeed because of her past. The god’s agent is rediscovering his stolen humanity. The young local boy is growing up, questioning his past assumptions, and learning the world is a much bigger and more complex place than he ever imagined. The planet itself, Ventus, is a unique character in the book. Ventus is not the natural, Earth-like planet it appears to be. All of what passes for nature here, the flora, fauna, even the weather, were created and are being managed by a sentient nano-technological marvel. To say more on this would create spoilers but suffice it to say it too has its own internal conflicts to resolve.
For the engaging story, decent characters, overall positive tone, and imaginative setting, I recommend this book. It is an enjoyable read.
( )
  DLMorrese | Oct 14, 2016 |
This book is available as a free download from the author's website! http://www.kschroeder.com/

from his site:
Ventus is a novel of information apocalypse set in the far future. For a thousand years the sovereign Winds have maintained the delicate ecological balance of the terraformed planet Ventus. Now an alien force threatens to wrest control of the terraforming system away from the Winds...

Jordan Mason, a young tradesman, is thrust into the midst of an ancient galactic conflict when he becomes the only human on Ventus who can locate the source of the alien threat. But will he side with the Winds, who have brutally suppressed technological development among the human colonists of Ventus? Or will he throw in his lot with an entity that may be planning to remake Ventus in its own, deathly image? Ventus incorporates ideas about nanotechnology, terraforming, and information theory in an epic tale of war, tragic love, betrayal and transcendence.
( )
  AltheaAnn | Feb 9, 2016 |
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» Añade otros autores (2 posibles)

Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Schroeder, KarlAutorautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
Pollack, AlanArtista de Cubiertaautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
Regina, Jane AdeleDiseñadorautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
Russo, CarolDiseñador de cubiertaautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado

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After terrifying and titanic struggles, a godlike artificial intelligence gone rogue has finally been destroyed. But not before it scattered seeds of itself throughout the galaxy. On the terraformed planet Ventus, benign AIs -- the godlike Winds - which shaped and guarded its transformation, have fallen silent. Calandria May is sent down to the surface where she quickly finds that an extension of the rogue AI, a cyborg called Armiger, has planted a strange and powerful device in a young man named Jordan Mason. Jordan has visions. He is desperate to find their meaning and source -- desperate enough to risk awakening the Winds, perhaps invoking the power that candestroy technology to protect the environment they created. Ventus is an epic journey across a fascinating planet with two big mysteries -- why have the Winds fallen silent? And is Armiger, or Jordan, carrying a Resurrection Seed?

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