Dreaming In Smoke Gateway Essentials SF MASTERWORKS Tricia Sullivan 9781473224742 Books

Dreaming In Smoke Gateway Essentials SF MASTERWORKS Tricia Sullivan 9781473224742 Books
The colonization project didn't get off to a great start, and now Kalypso (our heroine) is about to get bitten by the secrets her elders have been keeping.Dreaming in Smoke served to occupy a few hours, but I have to say, it wasn't good enough to recommend. I never was much of a fan of stream of consciousness, particularly since I never have believed the character's stream. Kalypso is annoying. The whole colony could suffocate, and I really, really wouldn't care. There is a happy ending, yes, and that's nice. I'm not a believer in killing everybody just for effect. But it would have made it more interesting.
I was uncomfortable with some of the science, as I'm almost sure there were some howlers I'd have caught if I paid the slightest attention in highschool biology, or taken chemistry. Ah, well.
So, don't rush out and spend your money on this one. It's okay, you won't be outraged, but look for it, if you decide you want to read it, in your local second hand bookstore.

Tags : Dreaming In Smoke (Gateway Essentials, S.F. MASTERWORKS) [Tricia Sullivan] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Kalypso Deed is a shotgun, riding the interface between the AI Ganesh and human scientists who solve problems through cyberassisted Dreams. But she's young and a little careless; she'd rather mix drinks and play jazz. Azamat Marcsson is a colorless statistician: middle-aged,Tricia Sullivan,Dreaming In Smoke (Gateway Essentials,S.F. MASTERWORKS),Gateway,1473224748,FICTION Classics,FICTION Science Fiction Action & Adventure,FICTION Science Fiction Genetic Engineering,FICTION Science Fiction Hard Science Fiction,Fiction,Fiction-Science Fiction,FictionClassics,FictionScience Fiction - Action & Adventure,FictionScience Fiction - General,FictionScience Fiction - Genetic Engineering,GENERAL,General Adult,Great BritainBritish Isles,Science Fiction,classic; masterwork; colonization; ai; robots; artificial intelligence;,classic; masterwork; colonization; ai; robots; artificial intelligence
Dreaming In Smoke Gateway Essentials SF MASTERWORKS Tricia Sullivan 9781473224742 Books Reviews
The structure of this book was really neat it opens with a minimum of exposition, instead dumping you right into an alien world and people doing procedural things that are unfamiliar. Before you can really get a handle on this, a crisis occurs! The backstory is revealed as the characters deal with the crisis. This is just a really neat way to tell a story. It DID make it hard to get into at first, but once I got going I really appreciated it and found it very compelling.
This book doesn't have as much hard science as something like Cryptonomicon, but I understand why some people were turned off by the chemistry and math. Definitely some of that material went over my head, but I felt like it worked on multiple levels and that a complete understanding of the science wasn't necessary. It added to the richness though.
It's hard to create an alien world, non-typical ways of living and non-typical societies. This book does all of those things and has the audacity to drop you right into them without a ton of prologue. I'm very much looking forward to reading more from this author.
Perhaps you will understand how I feel about science fiction about computers
cyberstuff. I try to avoid these, but I can't. They are everywhere. When
telephones were invented, did writers endlessly devote themselves to stories
about people talking on the phone? Even though the cover blurbs suggested cyber contamination, popular and critical reaction to Sullivan's books has
been good, so I wanted to give this a try. After I read a few pages, I was glad I did. Despite the extensive cyberscapes, Sullivan's book is about her characters
and their conflict with an alien planet's inhospitable biosphere. This story
isn't about "terraforming," but rather about the radical accommodations humans
have to make in order to live on the new host planet -- and also about the
changes they create on the planet as they invade it, "infect" it, virus-like.
Recreational readers (like me) like nothing better than discovering
another exciting storyteller. Add Tricia Sullivan to your list. Her books are
complex, profound, intelligent, profane, threatening, compelling, exciting.
This book was basically enjoyable and original enough to be interesting. The writing was not outstanding, but was not bad enough to reduce my enjoyment of the book. Unfortunately, the story sort of fell apart towards the end. It got difficult to follow and went on too long. After reaching a point that would have made a great ending, Sullivan opted instead to continue the story for another 20-30 pages. The result was an anti-climactic and disappointing end to an otherwise pretty good novel.
I never got the hang of disjointed surrealistic novels. This is definately one of those. It seems to meander in various directions, and I never once got the hang of what exactly was going on, or what was supposed to be going on - if anything.
It also suffered from a fault that many futuristic novels have. It seems that references to past events stop about the present time, and go back from there. Few novelist bother to fill in enough backstory for references to the past after the novel was published. It's a minor thing, but it can annoy me at times.
It had the elements of an interesting story, but I couldn't put it together well enough to enjoy the novel. If this is your sort of novel, you'll like this one well enough. It isn't mine, so I didn't.
So there is a computer-like AI thing with an immersive VR interface. Does that automatically label the story cyberpunk? Most of it takes place outside the interface, while the data collected on the planet by the mediocre scientist Marcsson modify behavior of the AI in control of the colony's base, threatening the colony's existence. No one knows what's going on until the almost very end, and various factions create complications for each other, throwing around sabotage accusations. For the main character, Kalypso, it's all set to music. Or the lack of that. Picked on and abused by almost everyone, she holds the key to everyone's survival without knowing it.
None of the characters are particularly likable, as they all are viewed from the objective point, emphasizing their human vices and failures. Math is merely called by name, there's none of it there to baffle the reader. Biology is present more strongly, requiring some basic knowledge of what algae are, as they compose all the visible life on the mostly liquid planet.
While some of the flow-of-conscience sequences aren't very interesting, the story in general is filled with overtones of psychedelic poetry. The AI functioning on the basis of Miles Davis's melodies alone is a wonderful idea, but there are also vivid paintings of the grim landscape, surreal encounters in both the reality and virtuality, and an implicit soundtrack detailed on the thank you list. Definitely a fresh original work, and definitely worth reading. It may be called a classic one day. Don't forget to listen to the music!
The colonization project didn't get off to a great start, and now Kalypso (our heroine) is about to get bitten by the secrets her elders have been keeping.
Dreaming in Smoke served to occupy a few hours, but I have to say, it wasn't good enough to recommend. I never was much of a fan of stream of consciousness, particularly since I never have believed the character's stream. Kalypso is annoying. The whole colony could suffocate, and I really, really wouldn't care. There is a happy ending, yes, and that's nice. I'm not a believer in killing everybody just for effect. But it would have made it more interesting.
I was uncomfortable with some of the science, as I'm almost sure there were some howlers I'd have caught if I paid the slightest attention in highschool biology, or taken chemistry. Ah, well.
So, don't rush out and spend your money on this one. It's okay, you won't be outraged, but look for it, if you decide you want to read it, in your local second hand bookstore.

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