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Loading... Echo of Worldsby M. R. Carey
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Really good. Action packed, interesting ideas, nails the ending ( ) The first half of this two-part work I esteemed as highly as any SF novel published last year and, so far, this is my favorite SF novel published this year. About the only thing that I can mark down this multi-verse conflict between organic and AI antagonists for, is that Carey provided perhaps a little too much foreshadowing in the first novel; so you're not going to get any spoilers from me. One last plus is though this is part of a self-contained set, Carey does seem to leave an avenue for an expansion of this world; I hope I'm right about that hypothesis. The sequel to Infinity Gate. This seemed to have more techy info dumps and I had trouble with some of the science, but that didn't hurt my enjoyment of this fast-moving story of AI versus organics across the infinite Earths of the multiverse. The war between the Pandominion (sentient organics, including humans) and the Ansurrection (AIs) has ratcheted up and the Pandominion has a plan to destroy the machines. Rupshe, a powerful AI on a non-affiliated Earth that suffered a decimating war a decade ago has its own plan, along with a small team of organics and AIs to help. Aside from my poor job of summarizing the plot, this is a immensely readable book, with memorable characters, especially Paz, a teenaged girl from Ut, a version of Earth where the main sentient species evolved from rabbits instead of apes. Paz, with her digital implants (including part of her brain as part of a life-saving surgery), becomes the key to ending the war. This is a story with a lot of heart. Second in a duology about a genocidal war between machine intelligences and organic sentients, focusing on the small group of organics, machine intelligences, and hybrids that is trying to stop it. Interesting use of the idea of group consciousness—both machine and organic—and how that changes one’s stances on extinction events. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesPandominion (2)
Two mighty empires are at war - and both will lose, with thousands of planets falling to the extinction event called the Scour. At least that's what the artificial intelligence known as Rupshe believes. But somewhere in the multiverse there exists a force - the Mother Mass - that could end the war in an instant, and Rupshe has assembled a team to find it. Essien Nkanika, a soldier trying desperately to atone for past sins; the cat-woman Moon, a conscienceless killer; the digitally recorded mind of physicist Hadiz Tambuwal; Paz, an idealistic child and the renegade robot spy Dulcimer Coronal. Their mission will take them from the hellish prison world of Tsakom to the poisoned remains of a post-apocalyptic Earth, and finally bring them face to face with the Mother Mass itself. But can they persuade it to end eons of neutrality and help them? And is it too late to make a difference? Because the Pandominion's doomsday machines are about to be unleashed - and not even their builders know how to control them. No library descriptions found. |
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