The Cosmic Computer
Book Excerpt
The old Rebel cursed. "Gehenna of a big crop; we're up to our necks in melons. This time next year we'll be washing our feet in brandy."
"Hold onto it and age it; you ought to see what they charge for a drink of Poictesme brandy on Terra."
"This isn't Terra, and we aren't selling it by the drink," Colonel Zareff said. "We're selling it at Storisende Spaceport, for what the freighter captains pay us. You've been away too long, Conn. You've forgotten what it's like to live in a poor-house."
The cargo was coming off, now. Cask staves, and more cask staves. Zareff swore bitterly at the sight, and then they started toward the wide doors of the shipping floor, inside the Airlines Building. Outgoing cargo was beginning to come out; casks of brandy, of course, and a lot of boxes and crates, painted light blue and bearing the yellow trefoil of the Third Fleet-Army Force and the eight-pointed red star of Ordnance. Cases of rifles; square boxes of ammunition; crated auto-cannon. Conn turned to hi
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Readers reviews
Merlin was rumored to be a supercomputer that ran the Terran Federation side of the war, but after 40 years no one is sure it ever existed.
Conn wheels and deals, gradually enriching Poictesme, but the real issue is "where is Merlin?"
A rather convoluted story, but for the most part easy to follow. The business end of the manipulations is pretty dry, but the overall search for Merlin and all the dead ends and twists keep it entertaining.
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Does it exist or is it a fable? Citizens have strong opinions both ways. They have even stronger opinions about the potential social, economic, political, and religious impacts of finding - or not finding - Merlin.
As I progressed through this book, I thought at times that I might be reading an economics text, an article from the Wall St. Journal, construction and engineering plans, personnel allocation reports, police reports ... you get the idea - LOTS of what seems to be excessive detail.
But after finally working through it all and completing the book I must admit that it was a pretty good read.
Brilliant fiction writing that's way ahead of its time.
The story begins decades after a massive orgy of authoritarianism, in which the Federation had fought an interstellar war to suppress the secession of a number of human-settled star systems, inflicting upon its remaining member populations (as well as the conquered worlds) enormous devastation, both military and economic. The people of one loyalist star system had enjoyed the heated artificial "prosperity" of serving as the logistic hinge of the Federation offensive, followed now by a dismal and long-sustained interplanetary postwar "bust."
Thus the stage is set for an effort on the part of the largely abandoned locals to construct for themselves some kind of viable economy out of the discarded resources wasted by the Federation in this foolish reconquista.
Piper proves here his insight into macroeconomics while providing well-paced action in his plotting and the wholly credible characters through whom he tells this story. All elements function believably within the context the writer has created for them, and those familiar with Piper's structured future history series of novels and shorter fiction will find in The Cosmic Computer an important component of the great galaxy-spanning multi-millennial tale he had devised and presented through the 1950s and 1960s.
Overriding the capitalism and trade issues is the almost mystic belief that the Terran Federation has created an omniscient computer named the Merlin Project to help with the war, which if found, could resolve and help with all the local problems-even run the government and define religion in the view of some fringe groups. There is a suspicion it is on or near Poictesme. Does it exist, or is it just a myth? Will they find it? What will they ask it if they do? What might it do or say? Conn has some info about the project (or lack of a project) that he learned on Terra that he is keeping close to the vest.....
Comment: This is an interesting story but it is divided between the computer quest and the somewhat bogged down space business affairs. Fans of galactic empire building computer games may like it, But in my view, there is much too much "who did what" to get money or manage assets in the stock market to allow the purchase or outfitting of yet another ship. Almost gets like a Tolstoy novel trying to keep the characters straight. Otherwise worth a read.