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Mindworlds [Hardcover]

Phyllis Gotlieb (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 17, 2002
How can you stop a conspiracy of telepaths? The alien Lyhhrt are powerful enough to read the human mind; if they find you know too much, they can erase your memory, or simply stop your heart. The normally peaceful Lyhhrt society has been splintered by technological change, the bitter legacy of their exploitation by the Zamos crime family. Now a few renegade Lyhhrt, driven mad by isolation from their group mind, seem to be planning terrible crimes--or are they again being used as deadly tools in someone else's scheme?

When the illicit corporation created by Zamos collapsed, it disrupted the lives of heroes as well as villains. With gambling dens shut down, gladiator Ned Gaddes has nowhere to fight. Beautiful Lorrice had hoped to sell her ESP talents to Zamos, but was forced to sell her body instead. And on the planet Khagodis, scholarly Hasso will be forced to leave his archives and unravel the shadowy web that has entangled their fate with the Lyhhrt's.

The struggle that ensues provides the ultimate test of their resources - Ned's savvy toughness, Lorrice's psychic insight, and the fact that even a gentle Khagodi like Hasso could go head-to-head with a dinosaur. Like the best science fiction, Mindworlds is simultaneously exciting and thought provoking. Gotlieb offers a satisfyingly complex look at the ambiguous consequences of toppling even the most evil of empires, and the sacrifices that ordinary people must make to prevent the vacuum of power from being filled by equally corrupt forces.

Ursula K. Le Guin found Gotlieb's earlier novel Flesh and Gold "dazzling," lit up by "sex, violence, intricate plotting, light-speed pacing, an amazing variety of aliens, touches of Philip K. Dick's sardonic humor and Cordwainer Smith's obstinate idealism." Its sequel, Violent Stars, was described in Maclean's as "above all a poet's novel.... Gotlieb's language lifts her book from exotic thriller to literary achievement." Mindworlds offers a resounding climax to the story that began in these celebrated novels.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

One part space opera of the old planetary-romance school and one part hard-boiled thriller, this final volume of Gotlieb's SF trilogy (after Flesh and Gold and Violent Stars) showcases the Canadian poet's ability to use the constraints of these subgenres like rhyme schemes to structure her varied and rich material. To accommodate the large cast of characters both new and old, the narrative follows three strands. The pugilist Ned Gattes and the telepath and former prostitute Lorrice are both looking for work now that the arenas and brothels once run by the defunct interstellar crime syndicate, the Zamos Corporation, are closed on their planet. They find themselves, along with the alien legal scholar Hasso, caught up in a conspiracy of gangsters and foreign agents trying to fill the vacuum left by the fall of the evil Zamos empire. While the parallels to post-Communist Russia offer food for thought, the multiple points of view never satisfyingly converge. The ubiquitous ESP powers allow for some lyrical and evocative flights of mental imagery, as well as intriguing difficulties for the crime solvers that, alas, remain underexploited. (Since evidence obtained by mind reading is not legally admissible, characters may know whodunit, but be unable to prove it.) Likewise, the author never fully explores the possibilities for paranoia implicit in a conspiracy that can read your thoughts. Fans may be disappointed that the novel, which works better as space opera than thriller, doesn't transcend either genre as well as the previous two books in the series. (May 7)novel, Sunburst.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

After the collapse of the corrupt Zamos criminal empire, the telepathic Lyhhrt, a race both physically helpless and mentally powerful, seek to recover from the technological ravages of their society, even if they have to use other intelligent beings as pawns in their schemes. In a galaxy populated by numerous races, a professional gladiator from Earth, a scholarly archivist from the planet Khagodis, and a free-willed robot named Spartakos become involved in the machinations of warring factions of Lyhhrt, risking their lives to bring order out of chaos. The author of Flesh and Gold and Violent Stars continues her epic tale of galactic adventure, romance, and political intrigue with a story that features a varied cast of intriguing characters caught up in situations that bring out their best and worst qualities. Recommended for most sf collections.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books; First Edition edition (May 17, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312878761
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312878764
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,783,730 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mindworlds - Wow!, August 22, 2002
By 
Sally Sproule (Toronto, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mindworlds (Hardcover)
This book really wowed me, and that's hard to do. I am a picky and experienced reader of SF and I know what I like. Phyllis Gotlieb delivers a story I really enjoyed, full of what she does best - sex, intrigue, a fair bit of violence and lots of fabulous alien and human characters. I am madly in love with her hero Ned Gattes and can picture him being played by Russell Crowe in the movie version... The last in her trilogy of Flesh & Gold, and Violent Stars, Mindworlds took me in new directions as well as satisfying my curiosity as to "what happened next" in the first books. Thanks Phyllis, for writing a novel that's both fun and challenging to the imagination!
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing world--confused action, June 19, 2002
This review is from: Mindworlds (Hardcover)
Man has met alien species in space, but greed, corporate corruption, and violence have not been overcome. Even within the Lyhhrt race of telepaths, the theoretical unity of the species is incomplete and factions battle for power.

GalFed agent Ned Gattes learns of a proposed invasion and arranges to join the mercenaries being assembled. Assisted by his cybernetic-psychic friend Spartakos and a Lyhhrt, he infiltrates the mercenary training base--but then finds himself trapped within a plot to kill everyone including himself. Hasso, a noted archivist, finds himself fascinated by a woman being held captive by her new husband. And Lyhhrt agents battle amongst themselves to recover remnants of the power of the fallen corporation Zamos--maker of clones.

Author Phyllis Gotlieb puts together a powerfully intriguing set of worlds, peoples, and powers, yet somehow fails to deliver a complete story. Although much is at stake, the novel's emotional intensity falls flat. Until relatively late in the novel, none of the characters seems to have a truly personal stake in the outcome of the battle. Gotlieb's frequent scene shifts end up distracting the reader and make it difficult to follow the plot thread.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars strong multi-alien science fiction, May 9, 2002
This review is from: Mindworlds (Hardcover)
The collapse of the octopus-like Zamos Corporation has left several voids in the interstellar system as well as leaving individuals in various state of isolation. The big bang impact of the disintegration of Zamos, actually a crime family, is quite shocking.

Pugilist Ned Gattes has no gambling halls to ply his trade and no one needs an ex-boxer. Telepath Lorrice also finds no one in need of her mental abilities. Alien legal scholar Hasso only wants to ply his profession, but every Tom, Dick and Khagodian wants to fill the Zamos emptiness. Then there are the Lyhhrt, splintered by Zamos from the oneness of their race, losing their touch with reality. When they complete their downward spiral into insanity, these renegades will cause havoc as never seen before because with a thought they can stop a heart or eradicate a thought. The players line up for a confrontation on Khagodis where events are already spinning towards a bloody clash of several alien life forms.

MINDWORLDS completes Phyllis Gotlieb's strong multi-alien science fiction trilogy. The story line is loaded with plenty of action on several fronts that converge on Khagodis, but never fully consolidate into the prime plot. Still the tale is fast-paced and very imaginative, as each alien species seems real as if Ms. Gotlieb had a drink at the Star Wars cantina. As the book asks, "How can you stop a conspiracy of telepaths?" Easy read the novel and its delightful predecessors because science fiction fans will fully enjoy this book that ties up loose ends from FLESH AND GOLD and VIOLENT STARS yet can stand alone.

Harriet Klausner

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
". . . and as my first example I offer you in all humility my own dissertation . . ." Hasso son of Evarny leaned harder on the lectern to ease his wasted leg, and faced the hundred-odd other Khagodi men and women squatting on their circled places in the Hall of Learning. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
impervious helmet, mess tent
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Galactic Federation, Ned Gattes, Burning Mountain, Port City, Western Sealand, Cinnabar Keys, New Interworld Court, Dead Moon Crater, Montador City, Ocean Star, Center Point, Northern Spines, Coastal Police, Governor Gorodek, Screaming Demons Chasm
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