Lyteraria reviewed Cuarentena by Greg Egan
Ficción de Copenhagen
Una novela sobre el colapso de la función de onda, suponiendo que se pueda escribir una. Ciencia ficción dura de muy buena calidad.
Paperback, 288 pages
English language
Published Jan. 1, 1995 by Eos.
In 2034, the stars went out. An unknown agency surrounded the solar system with an impenetrable barrier, concealing the universe from humanity’s gaze.
In 2067, Nick Stavrianos is hired to investigate the disappearance of a mentally disabled woman, Laura Andrews, from the institution where she was being cared for. Aided by a skull full of neural modifications, he follows her trail to the Republic of New Hong Kong, where an organisation known as the Ensemble has uncovered Laura’s extraordinary secret: an ability that could transform the world.
Una novela sobre el colapso de la función de onda, suponiendo que se pueda escribir una. Ciencia ficción dura de muy buena calidad.
A Greg Egan novel lives or dies by how well it explores its concepts - I mean, you're not reading them for the wooden mannequins that no longer have simple emotions get on the way of their discussions of rational futurism.
This book kinda chokes on that. I mean, it's still better than Distress, and it shows the unique physics-distortion that's the crux of the book in an interesting way, but doesn't really GO places. I know that's the whole point, but still.