Fireship

by Joan D. Vinge

Hardcover, 1978

Status

Available

Publication

Dell Publishing Company (1978), 156 pages

Description

"Learn what it's like to share your mind and body with a super-computer, then discover the joys and sorrows of parenthood on an alien world."--Page 2 of cover

User reviews

LibraryThing member AltheaAnn
This early book by Vinge is actually a "double" of two novellas:
Fireship is sort of a proto-cyberpunk heist adventure - our "hero" is the first person to have his consciousness linked with a computer. He was only an experimental subject, but once the computer linked with his brain, it achieved
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sentience, became a new amalgamate personality, and he was out of there - escaping to Mars with the technology.
Once there, a radical political group tracks him down and blackmails him into sabotaging the computer system of the guy who owns not only the Mars resort casino but has a politcal monopoly on earth...

The second novella is "Mother and Child," which reminded me much more of LeGuin in tone. In the far future, on another planet, two groups of the decadent remnants of humanity conflict against each other - one group follows an Earth-centric nature religion, and believes that those with special abilities are blessed by the Goddess. The other group believes these people are cursed. And, giving them an advantage - they have Gods - who are physically present and have been providing them with technology.
The story follows a priestess of the goddess, as she is kidnapped by the ruler of the opposing faction, but then removed from the path of the resulting war by a young and idealistic xenobiologist, who hopes for a better result of his race's interference than the mere control of a dangerously violent alien species...
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Awards

Hugo Award (Nominee — Novella — 1979)
Nebula Award (Nominee — Novella — 1979)

Language

Barcode

9185
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