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Chargement... Great Sky River (Galactic Center) (original 1987; édition 2004)par Gregory Benford
Information sur l'oeuvreGreat Sky River par Gregory Benford (1987)
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Ciclo del Centro Galactico III Well, now I'm hooked. This is the third book in Benford's "Galactic Center" series, but the first one set this far in the future. I liked it. I will have to see what happens in the next book, too. The author has created a rich world of the future where mankind is on the run from intelligent machines that dominate his world. Centuries of human advancement have seemingly been lost in the years of war. The story is about the struggle of a last few hundred on one planet. Mr. Benford heightens the interest by allowing the characters to speak in a language that is both familiar and different. The world they inhabit is alien to both them and the reader and the author's descriptions keep it that way, without getting burdensome. This is one of the most satisfying SF novels I've read in a while. Narra las miserias de un grupo de supervivientes humanos en su constante huida de los mecs, las máquinas que hace siglos invadieron el planeta Nieveclara, y que durante largos años convivieron con sus anteriores colonizadores humanos, modificando implacablemente (¡mecformado!) el clima del planeta para hacerlo menos hostil a sus delicados mecanismos. Benford, Gregory. Great Sky River. 1987. Galactic Center No. 3. Aspect, 2004. I like to imagine Gregory Benford sitting in a theater in 1984 watching Arnold Schwarzenegger terrorize California in The Terminator. He must have thought, I can do this in my Galactic Hub series and make the mechs more plausible. Three years later, that is exactly what he accomplished in Great Sky River. Having discovered the hostile mech civilization at the center of the galaxy, humans have begun to settle multiple systems trying to grab a toehold in which they can survive. Great Sky River is set on a colony planet where things have not gone well. The ecology has been devastated by mech invaders and only a few bands of nomadic humans survive to wage a feeble insurgency. They scavenge and adapt what they can of mech technology and struggle to maintain their cultural heritage. By this point in the series, Benford has a solid grip on where he wants the six-novel sequence to go. Epic space opera at its best. A bit of a stretch for Benford -- gritty, nasty, and planet bound, and hence more modern than most of his work and much of what was published in the 1980s. On a colony planet in the far future, humanity consists of a few hundred people in small tribes constantly on the run (literally) from intelligent machines. Those machines gradually and violently took over the planet and are now terraforming it to their own needs. Most machines actually don't care about people, killing them only when they get in the way. A few though are hunting people down and sure-deathing them, i.e., not only killing them but sucking up the memories that would normally be saved on chips and carried by the remaining colonists. Most of the book relentlessly follows this theme, getting grotesque in certain parts not unlike Banks or other more recent space opera. But every once in a while, some message arrives to reset the plot, straight out of pulp SF 1930s roots. This was the biggest flaw of the book for me. To an older reader of SF in the 1980s, this probably made the grimness of the book more palatable and familiar. To a reader of modern SF, it's jarring and damaging to the integrity of the story. Another flaw, annoying but not fatal, was Benford's need to explain everything. The colonists have no understanding of te sophisticated mech suits they wear, part human-built, part cannibalized from the machines. To make sure the reader knows he did his world-building homework, Benford keeps tossing in paragraphs about how things works always tagged with some form of "unknown to Killeem" or "without Killem's understanding". With the caveat that you need to be prepared for some deus ex machina plot shifts, I recommend this as an above average entry in Benford's Galactic Center series. It is not necessary to have read the previous books. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Appartient à la sérieGalactic Center (3) Prix et récompenses
Collection dirig e par G rard KleinLa Grande Rivi re du ciel, c'est la Voie lact e, vue du centre de la galaxie. C'est l que se joue peut- tre le dernier acte de l'histoire de l'humanit .Traqu e par des machines intelligentes, la tribu de Killeen et de Shibo n'a plus qu'un espoir: retrouver le navire magique Argo, l'un de ceux qui ont amen leurs anc tres, travers l'espace interstellaire, sur un monde qui fut un paradis. Avant l'arriv e des Machines. Mais pour cela, il leur faudra d jouer les ruses d'intelligences artificielles aussi puissantes que le Fabricant ou que la Mante.Gregory Benford, crivain et physicien, nous offre ici le premier volet d'une des plus vertigineuses trilogies de la science-fiction, auquel feront suite Mar es de lumi re et Les Profondeurs furieuses. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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