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T. J. Bass (1932–2011)

Autor von Der Gott-Wal

5+ Werke 669 Mitglieder 9 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

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Beinhaltet die Namen: T. J. Bass, T J; TJ BASS; T J Bass

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Werke von T. J. Bass

Der Gott-Wal (1974) 389 Exemplare
Die Ameisenkultur (1971) — Autor — 276 Exemplare
Songs of Kaia 1 Exemplar
The God Whale 1 Exemplar

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Rorqual Maru era un ciber..., en parte ballena orgánica, en parte un barco mecanizado..., y en parte un dios. Era una cosechadora -un enorme rastrillo de plancton que carecía de cosecha- abandonada por la Sociedad Terrestre cuando los mares murieron.
Decidió elegir una isla para varadero con la esperanza de conservar sus restos visible para un futuro salvamento. Aunque su sensible oído nada captaba, creía que el hombre aún vivía en su colmena. Si alguna vez él volviese a los mares, ella quería serle útil. Añoraba el placer de los desnudos pies del hombre tocando la piel de su cubierta. Echaba de menos los ardorosos gritos, el sudor y la risa.… (mehr)
 
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Natt90 | 4 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 5, 2022 |
Yet another dystopia. I shd really write these reviews when the bks are fresh in my mind. But then, I'm trying to list EVERY BK I'VE EVER READ - so there's alotof ancient recall. No doubt this bk deserves better than those opening 3 words. A shrunken humanity living in underground hive cities.
 
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tENTATIVELY | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 3, 2022 |
A classical dystopia in which humans are the main source of protein for other humans, with a destroyed ecosystem, a highly regulated / controlled underground society and (barely) no one who challenges these circumstances - at least as long as there's no contact with the few surviving five-toed aboriginals at the surface.

But of course this contact happens, and mayhem ensues. Mayhem that results in the eternal struggle about the questions of freedom vs. safety, authority vs. free will.

I liked the cast of this novel, the good guys as well as the bad guys (which is to be taken literally, as women only appear as walking uteruses or to be fridged - 1970s misogyny at its finest). But Bass crafts some remarkable human characters into this inhuman and dehumanised world, each with their own quirks, frustrations and motivations - which sometimes clash spectacularly.

It's no 1984 and no Fahrenheit 451, but it's remarkable enough to have earned its place in the "SF Masterworks" series. An enjoyable read.
… (mehr)
 
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DeusXMachina | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 7, 2017 |
My reaction to reading this novel in 1998. Spoilers follow.

This book is allegedly, according to its back blurb, a sequel to the earlier written Half Past Human. In the dense prose, I really couldn’t get any clues as to internal chronology. As I recall, the oceans in Half Past Human were lifeless, and the Procyon Implant reseeds them in this novel. There is also a reference to Dan, a dog with golden teeth, which could refer to the dog of Half Past Human. His leptoscul records (the least scientifically convincing aspect of the book) are said to be ancient. On the other hand, the buckeyes of Half Past Human are hardly mentioned.

The plots of both books are roughly the same. Outsiders (here the Benthic dwellers who have adapted to living by and below the sea via knowledge and leftover technology – presumably from the days the Hive tried to settle in the seas – alluded to in the earlier novel) fight the Hive with the help of rebels and castoffs from ES. As in the earlier novel, an old space probe, K.A.R.L., shows up at the end – though as a derelict and not to save the day – the oceans are seeded early on. Both books even end by mentioning an equation.

ARNOLD grumbles that he’d rather be an accident of nature than a product of design. To be sure, the character types are not repeated. Larry Dever is a cyborg crippled in the days pre-ES who hopes to be cured when taken out of cryonic suspension. ES thaws him out – and then, in one of the several black humor episodes of the book, won’t fix him and demands he down “Euthanasia Liquor”. He refuses and takes up residence in the squalid “Tweenwall” society of ES. There he links up with Har, a reject from the “Embryolab” who was to be briefly used as therapy for a hebephrenic schizophrenic woman before being recycled as Protein. Intelligent mechs (it’s still unclear if their parts are really organic – the Hive is skilled at biological engineering – or just referred to with biological nomenclature) play a big part, particularly Rorqual Mara, titular cyborg of the title, last of a fleet of plankton harvesters back in the days when there was marine life for the Hive to harvest. There is Drum, who has his retirement cut short, and Chess Grandmother Ode, who looses an election (a diabolically clever egalitarian notion where, if at least five people don’t vote for you, you loose your ration of shelter and food). They work their way up from the sewers – literally – to become important players in the struggle between the Hive and Benthics. There is ARNOLD, engineered warrior who turns on the Hive.

Bass’ prose is dense. This novel has the breaks clearly marked so transitions between scenes are much clearer. The science of both robotics, cloning, genetic engineering, and medical details all strike me as plausible. (The “memory molecules” probably stem from the belief, in the early seventies, that RNA molecules encoded memory.) Bass’ prose doesn’t work as well for describing naval battles as it did describing the earlier novels descriptions of hunts for “garden pests”.

An enjoyable, hard sf novel that I liked a lot more than I thought I would.
… (mehr)
 
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RandyStafford | 4 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 18, 2013 |

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