Status
Available
Publication
Tor Books (1989)
Similar in this library
User reviews
LibraryThing member RandyStafford
My reactions to reading this double in 1998. Spoilers follow.
“Screwtop”, Vonda N. McIntyre -- An engrossing but not terribly memorable story about life in a prison camp on an alien world. The characters were fairly well done. I particularly liked Gryf – the character with four genetic
“The Girl Who Was Plugged In”, James Tiptree, Jr I read this after watching an adaptation of it on the Sci-Fi Channel’s Welcome to Paradox. It was a fairly faithful adaptation which shows, stripped of Tiptree’s hip language, that this is a love story. It is one of the precursors to cyberpunk with the protagonist’s displaced mind, her love affair mediated via a telepresence. It reminded strongly of Frederik Pohl’s classic “Day Million”. (I have no idea if Tiptree was consciously responding to it or not.). Both talk directly to the reader in a chatty, edgy vernacular (though this story is substantially longer) and are love stories made bizarre and rococo by future technologies. I’m not a fan of Tiptree and consider her overrated, but I liked this one.
“Screwtop”, Vonda N. McIntyre -- An engrossing but not terribly memorable story about life in a prison camp on an alien world. The characters were fairly well done. I particularly liked Gryf – the character with four genetic
Show More
parents. “The Girl Who Was Plugged In”, James Tiptree, Jr I read this after watching an adaptation of it on the Sci-Fi Channel’s Welcome to Paradox. It was a fairly faithful adaptation which shows, stripped of Tiptree’s hip language, that this is a love story. It is one of the precursors to cyberpunk with the protagonist’s displaced mind, her love affair mediated via a telepresence. It reminded strongly of Frederik Pohl’s classic “Day Million”. (I have no idea if Tiptree was consciously responding to it or not.). Both talk directly to the reader in a chatty, edgy vernacular (though this story is substantially longer) and are love stories made bizarre and rococo by future technologies. I’m not a fan of Tiptree and consider her overrated, but I liked this one.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Lyndatrue
"The Girl Who Was Plugged In," originally published in 1973, won the Hugo for that year. McIntyre's work, "Screwtop," was originally published in 1976, and already the world had started to change. I liked Screwtop well enough, but the winner here is Tiptree's work.
I'm vaguely annoyed that TOR
I'm vaguely annoyed that TOR
Show More
decided to insert a random snippet of some up and coming novel (Swordspoint, by Ellen Kushner), in the center, I suppose to add pages (46, give or take a blank page or so). Show Less
Language
Original language
English
Original publication date
1989
1973 (The Girl Who Was Plugged In)
1976 (Screwtop)
ISBN
0812545540 / 9780812545548