The Weapon Shops of Isher

by A. E. van Vogt

Paperback, 1995

Status

Available

Call number

813

Publication

New English Library Ltd (1995), Paperback

User reviews

LibraryThing member isabelx
This seems to be a longer version of a short story about the weapon shops that I have already read, expanded to go into more detail about the workings of the weapon shop organisation.
LibraryThing member ben_a
Not really working for me, I fear. At 170 pages in I'm close to the end and am unlikely to finish. More machines that measure people's moral qualities, which given van Vogt's association with Hubbard, is no shocker...
LibraryThing member Lyndatrue
Same book different year.
LibraryThing member Lyndatrue
If you don't already have strong libertarian leanings, this may not be the book for you. While my own politics are all over the place, reading this (in my very distant youth) was a revelation. It's my favorite van Vogt work (it must be, since I own two copies), and it's a fun read.

From the back
Show More
cover:

"Imagine an empire of the far future, dictatorial, proud, all-conquering, whose citizens could defy it at will by merely entering a store and buying a gun! The guns would be super-weapons that the Empire couldn't duplicate or defeat--and the stores would be impregnable fortresses open to everyone except soldiers and policemen!"
Show Less
LibraryThing member ikeman100
This is one of Van Vogt's better books. I enjoyed this one. Amazing imagination. It has story structure flaws but I didn't let it ruin the experience.

I will read the second book in the series, "The Weapon Makers".
LibraryThing member DinadansFriend
A great deal of fun. the people with the weapons are not the kind of gun owners we seem to find in American right wing politics, but quite civilized people intent on helping all to a happier life. I wish it had worked out so well as van Vogt visualized it.
LibraryThing member mkfs
What starts off as a Second Amendment thought experiment veers off into speculation on time travel and political corruption.

Thousands of years in the future, an empire declares war on an underground society that supplies defensive weaponry to honest individuals. The outcome is to be decided by two
Show More
people: your standard Immortal With Advanced Technology, and a typical Chosen One who is out seeking his fortune.

Van Vogt is a clumsy wordsmith, making for a tedious (though occasionally amusing) read.
"He watched the slender woman-shape move off into the shadows." "Green lights directly in front of him flashed unscintillatingly into red.". Stuff like that.

What does work is the sheer cynicism of the world that he has imagined. The Akira moment of the epilogue is a nice finish, but hardly a surprise.
Show Less
LibraryThing member mmparker
Wish I had abandoned this one, but I kept waiting for it to turn around. The whole story is predicated on a series of inventions of incredible power that somehow haven't affected any other part of society. Guns with AI so sophisticated that they only fire in self-defense, but somehow there are
Show More
still office buildings full of clerks? A machine that unerringly identifies morally upstanding people but the world government is run by a hereditary monarchy? It's entirely too ludicrous.
Show Less

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1951

Physical description

191 p.; 17.5 cm

ISBN

0450045161 / 9780450045165

Local notes

Omslag: Poul Monteagle
Omslaget viser en skaldet mand med en pudsig pistol, som sidder og kigger på nogle pudsige glasfigurer
Indskannet omslag - N650U - 150 dpi

Pages

191

Rating

½ (124 ratings; 3.6)

DDC/MDS

813
Page: 0.6263 seconds