Accelerando
Book Excerpt
Welcome to the twenty-first century.
The permanent floating meatspace party Manfred is hooking up with is a strange attractor for some of the American exiles cluttering up the cities of Europe this decade - not trustafarians, but honest-to-God political dissidents, draft dodgers, and terminal outsourcing victims. It's the kind of place where weird connections are made and crossed lines make new short circuits into the future, like the street cafes of Switzerland where the pre Great War Russian exiles gathered. Right now it's located in the back of De Wildemann's, a three-hundred-year old brown cafe with a list of brews that runs to sixteen pages and wooden walls stained the color of stale beer. The air is thick with the smells of tobacco, brewer's yeast, and melatonin sp
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Readers reviews
But what most impressed me about this story was the incredibly subtle ducking and weaving necessary to write a story that spans centuries and actively involves exponential growth in technology, without wasting a lot of words to explain the technologies themselves.
Fantastic read.
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A damn good read.
Be sure to know your science/tech before embarking on this one. It may start as a usual postcyberpunk story but includes three generations, alien contacts, and a technology singularity. This was certainly, apart from Lem, the most far-reaching science fiction I've read so far. It's even hilariously funny, at times.
If you want to get a taste of what it might be like if you were suddenly shifted ahead in time a hundred or more years, try 'Accelerando'. Just remember this isn't your father's SF.
Lindsay Brambles (author of In Darkness Bound)
Overall, I'd give it 4.75 out of 5.
btw, there's an explanation of Accelerando's technical terms at wikibooks.org