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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Slightly Untouched
Jack Williamson deserves to be remembered among the all-time science fiction greats. With The Humanoid Touch, he revives the humanoids - robots whose Prime Directive is to protect Man from harm. The Humanoids debuted in "With Folded Hands" in the late 1940s (which I've read) and in the novel The Humanoids (which I've not). In The Humanoid Touch, a last...
Published on March 14, 2004 by jrmspnc

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Reluctant
This was a cheap reproduction of the original "The Humanoids" plot that did not make sense. The original was much better--don't waste your money on this one.
Published 19 months ago by Carlton R. Bracken


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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Slightly Untouched, March 14, 2004
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jrmspnc (Maryland, USA) - See all my reviews
Jack Williamson deserves to be remembered among the all-time science fiction greats. With The Humanoid Touch, he revives the humanoids - robots whose Prime Directive is to protect Man from harm. The Humanoids debuted in "With Folded Hands" in the late 1940s (which I've read) and in the novel The Humanoids (which I've not). In The Humanoid Touch, a last bastion of humanity tries to hide from or fight against the inevitable humanoid advance.

Williamson's humanoids are provocative in every sense. What happens when robots become too perfect, no matter how "benevolent" their intentions? There is a latent horror throughout the book as the characters realize the humanoids are near. Williamson succeeds in creating the aura of fear that Saberhagen hints at with his Berserkers, or Star Trek with the Borg. Williamson's humanoids, however, are far more terrifying than either - who would have thought the words "At your service" could induce such spine-tingling horror?

The human characters more or less get in the way of the true protagonists, and here is where Williamson's skills perhaps aren't quite up to snuff. The interaction and personal relationships between characters is not much more advanced than in his 1930s pulp sci-fi Legion series (a nevertheless fine read). And the ending doesn't sit right; it's on the one hand too pat, and on the other too troubling - I can't say more without divulging spoilers.

All in all, however, this one ranks as a must read by all science fiction fans. The humanoids are among sci-fi's greatest creations, easily the equal of Dune's Fremen or Asimov's psychohistory. If you thought the Borg were creepy, you haven't seen anything until you've seen the humanoids.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An Excellent Sequel To A Sci-Fi Classic, June 2, 2009
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s.ferber (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
In Jack Williamson's classic short story "With Folded Hands" (1947), the inventor of the Humanoids--sleek black robots whose credo is "To Serve And Obey, And Guard Men From Harm," even if that means stifling mankind's freedoms--makes an unsuccessful attempt to destroy the computer plexus on planet Wing IV that is keeping the many millions of units functioning. In the author's classic sequel, the novel "The Humanoids" (1949), another unsuccessful stab is made, 90 years later, by a "rhodomagnetics" engineer and a small group of ESP-wielding misfits, to stop the Humanoids (which now number in the billions) and their campaign of relentless and smothering benevolence. And in Williamson's much belated follow-up, 1980's "The Humanoid Touch," we flash forward a good 1,000 years or so, to find yet another group making the attempt in what is now a galaxy with trillions of Humanoid units. In fact, the only place where the robots have NOT penetrated seems to be the sister planets of Kai and Malili, orbiting a binary star. On Kai, young Keth Kyrone dreams of one day joining his father's Lifecrew, a small group that is vainly trying to warn the planet's population of the Humanoids' imminent arrival and build some sort of protective weapon against the scourge. Kai is not the easiest of planets for its human settlers, who migrated there a millennium before to escape the ever-advancing robot servants. With its rapidly alternating summers and winters, migrations are frequent and dwellings must be built largely underground. But still, the planet is an Eden compared to Malili, where "bloodrot" spores will kill any man in a matter of hours, and where the folks of Kai can only live in the sterilized safety of The Zone. But how to explain the natives of Malili, naked "savages" who seem to do just fine there? And what is the secret of the feyolin drug that these indigenous folk extract from the local "braintrees"? It is against this fully realized backdrop that Williamson sets his action-filled plot, and brings his Humanoids to once again "give service."

Wisely, however, the author does not allow the robots to make an appearance until the book is halfway done, generating real suspense, and their initial appearance is shocking in the extreme. The Humanoids have, in the current novel, perfected their ability to make replicants of any human being, so that the reader is left uncertain just who is real and who might be a mechanized enemy. And it's not just the Humanoids who have perfected their arts over the years. Williamson's writing has improved as well (although some of the landscape descriptions of Kai and Malili are a bit fuzzy, almost Impressionistic, making the reader really use his/her imagination at times), and the looser mores of the '80s (as compared to the '40s) enable him to indulge in some mild sex scenes and to use some language unthinkable in the earlier pulps. Thus, the reference to "ferticloset sh_tbricks" (not a bad name for a rock band, come to think of it!) and, perhaps more shocking, to a woman's "pubes." The subject of drugs is raised with the depictions of feyolin, which Keth samples in an early scene; the drug seems more than anything like LSD, with its hallucinatory effects and time/space distortions. Still, despite the new looseness, this is some very serious science fiction here that asks some tough questions. Left with another ambiguously happy ending, the reader must ponder if happiness is worth the loss of freedom, and whether a drugged, artificial bliss is better or worse than a life of unaided struggle. In a telling argument close to the book's end, one of the Humanoids mentions that democracies are suicidal, with their "excessive developments of high technology and aggressive individualism that lead inevitably to racial annihilation," and most in need of their controlling services. Some serious food for thought, to be sure. "The Humanoid Touch," filled with interesting characters, unusual backdrops, some tense and exciting action scenes and unrestrained imagination, is a marvelous sequel; not as original or compact as its predecessors, perhaps, but still well worth any sci-fi fan's attention. Most readers, I have a feeling, will be left wishing that author Williamson had given us just one more book about those too helpful, self-replicating creations from planet Wing IV....
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars worth reading, July 14, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: The Humanoid Touch (Hardcover)
this is a great book. For anyone that likes science fiction this is worth the read. It even has a happy ending, well sort of
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Reluctant, June 27, 2010
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This was a cheap reproduction of the original "The Humanoids" plot that did not make sense. The original was much better--don't waste your money on this one.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the gratest coming of age stories every written, September 8, 2002
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Believe it or not this is one of the best coming of age stories ever written. In the tradition of studs lonigan or a midnite glear It truly is a powerhouse. Young Keth Korone passes through the threshold from boyhood to manhood set to a borg like invading army of benevolent robots. This is the only book I have read three times. Though I can not tell you who I am this work has had an amazing impact on my work
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The Humanoid Touch
The Humanoid Touch by Jack Williamson (Paperback - 1982)
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