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The Armies of Memory (Thousand Cultures) [Mass Market Paperback]

John Barnes (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Thousand Cultures April 3, 2007
Giraut Leones, special agent for the human Thousand Cultures' shadowy Office of Special Plans, is turning fifty--and someone is trying to kill him.
 
Giraut's had a long career; the number of entities that might want him dead is effectively limitless.  But recently Giraut was approached by the Lost Legion, an Occitan underground linked to an alliance of illegally human-settled worlds beyond the frontier. Also, it turns out that the Lost Legion colony has a "psypyx" --a consciousness-recording--of Shan, onetime boss of the Office of Special Plans. If they have that, they have literally thousands of devastating secrets.
 
Now, returning to his native Nou Occitan, Giraut will encounter violence and treachery from human and artificial consciousnesses alike.  As bigotry and mob violence erupt throughout the rapidly destabilizing interstellar situation, Giraut will be called on the make the ultimate sacrifice, for the sake of civilization itself…

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Splendidly wrapping up the far-future cloak-and-psychological-dagger series that began with AMillion Open Doors (1992), this last grand adventure of master spy and latter-day troubadour Giraut Leones covertly steers the Thousand Cultures of near-immortal humanity between "the box," total withdrawal into virtual reality, and interstellar war involving the "aintellects" Giraut loathes for wanting to enslave their human masters. Giraut and his team fend off assassination attempts, while his songs change the hearts of beings around him—and ultimately his own. Rich with glowing resonances of medieval Languedoc, the inspiration for Barnes's convincing Nou Occitan milieu and language, this final chorale of a long and brilliant SF symphony reprises some of his most intriguing characters via the "psypyx," the consciousness-recording device that allows individuals to die physically and be reborn in new bodies. As Giraut loses one love after another, he discovers that the artist must grow beauty around the wounds in his own heart, an echo of Provençal courtly love that drives him through "insane glorious dangers" into a final Cyrano-sweep of a plumed hat at death: quel geste!(Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

The vastly underrated Barnes' latest book seems to conclude the far-far-future saga that began with A Million Open Doors (1992). Giraut Leone, secret agent for the Thousand Cultures, is approaching retirement. One final mission remains, however: to track down a repository of deadly secrets established by a dissident group far beyond the frontier of settlement. After adventures that would give James Bond cardiac arrest, and a nervous breakdown, Leone locates the data, but not in time to prevent its release, which threatens social chaos among the Thousand Cultures. Does he have any hope of resolving the crisis, even at the cost of his own life and the abandonment of all hopes for a well-deserved retirement? Told in a graceful, fluid manner that considerably surpasses the level of writing in, say, most current mainstream thrillers, this book makes one hope this isn't the last of Barnes' impressive future universe, and that the Thousand Cultures will be explored further, from other angles and other characters' perspectives. Roland Green
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Science Fiction (April 3, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765342243
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765342249
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,646,378 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

My thirtieth commercially published novel will be coming out in spring 2012. I've published about 4 million words that I got paid for. So I'm an abundantly published very obscure writer.

I used to teach in the Communication and Theatre program at Western State College. I got my PhD at Pitt in the early 90s, masters degrees at U of Montana in the mid 80s, bachelors at Washington University in the 70s; worked for Middle South Services in New Orleans in the early 80s. I do paid blogging mostly about the math of marketing analysis at TheCMOSite and All Analytics. If any of that is familiar to you, then yes, I am THAT John Barnes.

There are also many Johns Barneses I am not. I am not the British footballer, the Australian rules footballer, the former Red Sox pitcher, the Tory MP, the expert on ADA programming, the biographer of Eva Peron, the authority on Dante, the mycologist, the travel writer, the guy who does some form of massage healing that I don't really understand at all, the oil executive, the film historian, or that guy that Mom said was my father. I do wish I'd written that book on titmice, though.

I used to think I was the only paid consulting statistical semiotician for business and industry in the world, but I now know four of them. So now I have a large market share of a growing field.

Semiotics is pretty much what Louis Armstrong said about jazz, except jazz paid a lot better for him than semiotics does for me. If you're trying to place me in the semiosphere, I am a Peircean (the sign is three parts, ), a Lotmanian (art, culture, and mind are all populations of those tripartite signs) and a statistician (the mathematical structures and forms that can be found within those populations of signs are the source of meaning). The branch in which I do consulting work is the mathematics and statistics of large populations of signs, which has applications in marketing, poll analysis, and annoying the literary theorists who want to keep semiotics all to themselves.

I have been married three times, and divorced twice, and I believe that's quite enough in both categories. I'm a hobby cook, sometime theatre artist, and still going through the motions after many years in martial arts.

 

Customer Reviews

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic end to an excellent series, May 4, 2006
By 
Tim F. Martin (Madison, AL United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Armies of Memory (Hardcover)
_The Armies of Memory_ is the excellent final volume of the as far as I know unnamed series by author John Barnes that began with _A Million Open Doors_ and continued with _Earth Made of Glass_ and _The Merchant of Souls_.

The main character, as was the case with previous installments of the series, is Giraut Leones, native of the culture of Nou Occitan, publicly a famous musician though in reality a special agent for the Office of Special Projects (OSP), the military/intelligence/police arm of the Council of Humanity, the governing body of the Thousand Cultures, home to all known human worlds, located in a roughly hundred light year diameter sphere centered roughly on Earth.

Also as in previous installments, Giraut continues to advance the goals of the OSP, those being twofold. First, to manage the peaceful interaction of the myriad civilizations of the Thousand Cultures, some in conflict virtually since their founding, others in conflict since an event known as the Connect, when civilizations previously separated by many years of travel were suddenly united by the most momentous invention in human history since fire and writing, the springer (which as readers of the series will know, is a device that allows instantaneous travel between two points, no matter the distance, as long as both points have springers). Second, while managing diversity and conflict, keeping it under control and maintaining some sense of cohesion and unity between these various cultures, the OSP had to fight unity and stagnation in other cultures; seemingly the majority of the people in Earth's solar system (including Earth itself) had "gone into the box," had withdrawn from the world, become plugged into virtual reality nonstop, never leaving their apartments and sharing only the interstellar meta culture, utterly dependent upon aintellects (artificial intelligence in the form of robots and sentient computer programs) to run things. The first situation, if unchecked, would lead to the possible destruction of humanity in countless bloody wars and genocidal actions. The second situation, again if unchecked, would lead to the stagnation and extinction of humankind. Both situations would leave humanity woefully unprepared should it ever have to face a real threat from the stars.

_Armies of Memory_ opens with Giraut trying to record a new series of songs he called the Ix Cycle, named after Ix, a prominent figure readers of the series may remember from _Earth Made of Glass_. The songs were bold, original, and combined styles from widely different and even mutually opposed cultures, sure to generate comment at the very least and opposition at the very worst.

The reader also finds Giraut and his team members dodging assassination attempts. Who is trying to kill Giraut? Does someone violently oppose the Ix Cycle or are their other, quite different reasons?

Giraut and his team in the course of their recording the Ix Cycle and investigating the assassination attempts uncover a rather complex web of people and events. These threads include the existence of extraterritorial colonies beyond the frontiers of known human space (illegal colonies, not established with permission or even knowledge of the Council of Humanity), uncovering the reasons why contact was lost with one of the colony worlds of the Thousand Cultures decades ago, the fate of the builders of ruins found in human space (constructed by a very poorly known species labeled the Predecessors), the true nature of the wants and desires of the aintellects that in many ways really run human society, the whereabouts of a renegade OSP military unit called the Lost Legion, the real story behind the invention of the springer, and the existence of a long lost psypyx of Shan (Shan being the deceased former head of the OSP and a psypyx being a complete recording of a person's mind, sufficient to reconstruct that person inside a newly cloned host body). All of these diverse threads in the end do tie together though I have to admit that not all are completely resolved, despite this being presumably the last book in the series. Indeed, though Giraut's story does get a more or less definitive conclusion, to me it felt as if some story elements were just getting really interesting as the book ended, leaving me demanding further exploration of those ideas. I know it is a good thing for an author to leave its readers wanting more and I myself have tired of seemingly never ending novel series, leaving the reader weary of the story, tired of waiting, and less and less hopeful of any real conclusion of the series (not to mention tired of shelling out so much hard earned money), but this story certainly could have gone on for at least one more book and proved I think quite exciting.

I found the book very well written and quite engaging. My favorite part - I hope I am not giving away too much here - is a section detailing Shan's childhood from Shan's point of view, which I thought was fantastic writing and very gripping. I sincerely hope we have not seen the end of the series and I think the setting is quite rich and one open to a great deal of exploration. His alien worlds are believable, I find the idea of a created culture for each colony intriguing (and particularly liked how Barnes used some non-Western cultures), and liked what he had to say about overall trends of too much diversity and too much unity in society. I would also wouldn't mind seeing him put together some sort of guidebook to this setting, much like Peter F. Hamilton did with the setting of his _Night's Dawn Trilogy_ (the series that began with _Reality Dysfunction_).
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One of the must-read SF novels of 2006, September 4, 2006
By 
Richard R. Horton (Webster Groves, MO United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Armies of Memory (Hardcover)
This is in a way a capstone to John Barnes's excellent series of books about Giraut Leones, a spy for the future Thousand Cultures: a group of human colonies linked by "Springer" (instantaneous jump gates) technology and also reliant on AI and on quasi-immortality conferred by brain recordings ("psypyxes") that can be downloaded into clone bodies after the original's death.

As this novel opens, Giraut's ex-wife Margaret is now his boss, and Giraut is the head of a small team of agents including his new lover, his reincarnated 8-year old (physically) father and his reincarnated friend, Raimbault, from his youth back on Wilson. Giraut is also a spectacularly sucessful musician, playing Nou Occitan trobador-tradition music. Now he is premiering a new song cycle based on the life and beliefs of Ix, the founder of an important new religion. But this has made him a target, perhaps of Occitan traditionalists, or perhaps of enemies of Ixism -- or who knows?: at any rate, he is the subject of repeated assassination attempts. After a while it becomes clear that the assassination attempts are a curious mixture of brilliance and incompetence. And finally, more scarily, that they are being carried out by force grown clone bodies implanted with "chimera" brains: that is, the combination of two or more recorded human brains, an obscenity in Council culture.

All signs lead to planets of the "Union", a little-understood group of illegally colonized planets outside of Council space, in particular Aurenga, the planet colonized by the "Lost Legion", a group of Nou Occitan war criminals. This is interesting because there are indications that the lost psypyx of Margaret's predecessor Shan is also there. What's more, they learn that not only are human "chimeras" involved, but some chimera's might have AI components.

The novel quite intriquingly spirals from an important but smallish mystery to bigger and more important mysteries. Eventually it is in great part about the meaning of intelligence, and of humanity, and the place and rights of AIs. And this is in the context of extremely scary revelations about the fate of the Predecessors, and a threat of alien invasion. Barnes treats these issues very intelligently, and the novel is always interesting: full of action, full of neat science-fictional ideas that have interesting philosophical ramifications, and full of fine and engaging characters. A weakness is that the closing sections seem rushed, and are full of long (and still fairly interesting) passages in which we and the main characters are baldly told the situation, rather than having the situation organically revealed. And the unwinding of things towards the end has an air of patness, convenience, about it, even as it leads to a dramatic setpiece of a series conclusion. (Though there is room for another novel, and Barnes has mentioned one more, called The Far Cry.) But even with this shortcoming, this remains one of the must-read SF novels of 2006.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars stupendous science fiction, April 4, 2006
This review is from: The Armies of Memory (Hardcover)
Office of Special Plans espionage agent troubadour Giraut Leones works the thin line between total withdrawal into the virtual reality box and the war with the "aintellect" insurgents. At fifty Giraut intellectually prefers hiding inside the box to escape his growing melancholy, but must do his duty to the Thousand Cultures.

Though he is a target for assassination, Giraut continues to play songs that touch the hearts of those who come into contact with him. Still he wonders about his own heart's healing as he sadly recalls those he lost to death but revisited through the "psypyx" that enables individuals to die yet live seemingly forever. Between the psypyx and his own music, Giraut seeks solace as he begins to learn that love and beauty heal hurts. He returns home to Nou Occitan with a deeper understanding of the universe only to find treachery, betrayal, and violence. Will he virtually flee into his music making him an easy target for his prey but also enabling him to escape the horrors that engulf him or will Giraut try to save humanity from its worst enemy, itself?

THE ARMIES OF MEMORY, the climax of John Barnes' Thousand Cultures saga, may prove to be the best science fiction tale of the year. As always the characters make the exhilarating story line a one sitting reading experience The heroic Giraut feels his age as he is tired and ready to retire, but also realizes that if he wants to live he must remain on the job until he stops those who want him dead. He also concludes that humanity needs him at a critical moment, but he fears he has nothing left except his music and that may no longer be enough. Mr. Barnes is at his best with this stupendous science fiction story.

Harriet Klausner
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
fifteen stanyears, psypyx copies, psypyx recording, destructive deconstruction, com chimed, brain bomb, clone body, round for humanity, invasion barge, human space, image globe, gray glow, born body
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Council of Humanity, Lost Legion, Thousand Cultures, Nou Occitan, Ebles Ribaterra, Inward Turn, Chaka Home, Donz Leones, Giraut Leones, Theta Ursa Major, Hedon Gore, Never Again Till the Next Time, Occitan Legion, Prince Consort, Twelve Day Song, Union Intelligence, Advanced Research, Archived Cultures, Hedon Glass, New Baluchistan, Palace Square, Team One, Don't Forget, Great Assimilation, Inner Sphere
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