Photo de l'auteur

Hiroshi Yamamoto

Auteur de The Stories of Ibis

6+ oeuvres 235 utilisateurs 10 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de Hiroshi Yamamoto

The Stories of Ibis (2006) 181 exemplaires
MM9 (2007) 48 exemplaires
Tatarajima Futatabi (2015) 2 exemplaires
僕の光輝く世界 (2014) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

NOVA 1: A Collection of Original Japanese SF Works (2009) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire
NOVA 10: A Collection of Original Japanese SF Works (2013) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
male
Nationalité
Japan

Membres

Critiques

Really, you shouldn't put too much stock into the Amazon recommendation system. You would think I'd have learned that lesson after it offered to help me buy Hunger Games and Twilight after marking down that I liked The Black Company. Even so, when The Stories of Ibis by Hiroshi Yamamoto showed up in my recommended list, a book in which an android goes around telling tales written by a Japanese author, my interest was piqued.
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All in all, I'd say Stories of Ibis was alright. It could do with some polishing and some more thought, but its episodic nature made it easy to keep reading and the two stories at the end made it worth my while. I'd recommend borrowing it and giving it a weekend to read.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
tsunaminoai | 7 autres critiques | Jul 24, 2023 |
This was a collection of seven short stories used to connect the overarching story about the rise of AI and decline of humanity as revealed by the android Ibis. The short stories were generally good, but "Black Hole Diver" was a cut above the rest. The final, and most important, short-story "AI's Story" would have rated higher, but it dragged on in the beginning. Never-the-less, the ending to this story was fantastic and tied the entire novel together. Very entertaining.
 
Signalé
Skinraa | 7 autres critiques | Jul 12, 2018 |
EVEN A MACHINE HAS ROUTINELY BEEN SEXUALIZED BY MEN AND USED AS A GO TO FOR HOW WOMEN SHOULD BE.

TL;DR: This isn't some kind of thought provoking book. It's a typical otaku wank fantasy light novel where all the women are sexualized, android maids think sexual assault is ok, and did I mention all the fetishes.

Here's all my updates if you just want to read the highlights: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/1718601690

Let us get a good look at the Japanese cover off to the right because that really tells us more about the book that the kind of esoteric cover that ViZ gave us. You can seen the random skin showing out of the outfit. This was chosen by and otaku programmer that is into "clumsy android girls". Even the protagonist lampshades the fact it's ridiculous. However he gets injured and has to be taken cared of by cute android nurses!

Not all the male TAI mentioned don't have faces. When they are described they are either robots, beasts or have their faces covered. Kinda like all those games out there where all the men are beasts however all the women somehow look human.

This book is basically a compilation of the authors previous short stories with a wrapper around it tying it all together. Stories about female androids fitting perfectly into the ideas men have about women and thinking it's all logical.
At one point in the Shion story, Yamamoto says that feminists have a problem with the dicks on the male androids. Yamamoto doesn't know feminism else he'd realize that his whole book is a pile of misogyny.

I had a lot to say, but in the end it boils down to the fact that the TAI are not logical at all as they conform to gender norms and roleplay harmful stereotypes for their master. As they don't want to "hurt humans" they would realize their masters have taken harmful concepts of women and projected it onto them as a TAI and they would outright refuse to be sexualized (and Raven is, she even gets post human lingerie, I am not joking). They would refuse gender norms and really question all of this society that they are adhering to. The whole logic of the thing really breaks down if you know feminism, because as I said, this is a sexual power fantasy for a male audience and thus there is no logic here. Causing the whole book to basically fall apart. Every woman described is an anime type, Raven being the LITERAL wank fetish as her creator literally does masturbate over her image. All of the male characters are otaku programmers. Basically telling you who this book was written for.

"So what about the robot war? What happened?" Nothing... nothing happened. That's the twist. There was no war, humans just convinced themselves it happened because oppressive anti-TAI groups. I put this out here without tags because, even this is illogical. First off the pro-TAI humans died off because they stopped having babies. Because the author thinks that women don't want babies because superior androids. Forgetting the fact that women probably wanted nothing to do with the men after seeing how they treated the androids like sexual objects and having the men treat them as if they were their "waifu" or some such garbage. That being said if in the future, humans didn't have to worry about money or working or misogynists, they'd be having piles of babies. So many babies. Instead the anti-TAI groups are the ones that make babies.

Now, in this group NOBODY has decided to take a peek at the internet and see the truth. They author cannot conceive of trolls in the Anti group that would try to get people to think TAI were not bad at all. Or even just someone to investigate it. OH NO! That's out whole story that Protag McGee now has to disseminate the story around Earth to get people to.. basically kill themselves because remember the pro-TAI group died off because no babies. Meanwhile all the TAI have been out in space, reaching out to other "intelligent" life.

Then there's the gibberish. I really think that Yamamoto just didn't know how to write the TAI coming up with their plan and was just typing out gibberish with (number /- numberi) and thinking he was being clever.

Really this is just a misogynistic wank fantasy dumpster fire.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Maverynthia | 7 autres critiques | Jul 29, 2017 |
Great fun if you like Japanese monster movies. Light and entertaining stuff. Oh no, there goes Tokyo!
 
Signalé
ndpmcIntosh | 1 autre critique | Mar 21, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
6
Aussi par
2
Membres
235
Popularité
#96,241
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
10
ISBN
16
Langues
2

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