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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
More gems than the average collection; solid, wholesome.,
By M-I-K-E 2theD "2theD" (The Big Mango, Thailand) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Nine Billion Names of God (Paperback)
Nine Billion Names of God (1952) - 4/5: Nepalese monks hire an IBM computer to print all possible nine letter words in a special language which could be the name of their god. 7 pagesI Remember Babylon (1959) - 3/5: Non-fictional story from Clarke about his conversation with a telecommunications traitor to the USSR and their plans for the unrestricted American airwaves. 11 pages Trouble with Time (1959) - 3/5: Upon reaching your Mars destination, please reset your watch to the local Martian Standard Time. 6 pages Rescue Party (1945) - 5/5: Menagerie of aliens on a solar system exploration ship stumbles upon a sun about to go nova- Earth's sun. They whisk away to Earth to rescue anyone they can, only to realize that no one is there except the intact structures and subway system. Being that the humans have only had radio for 200 years, where could those humans have gone? 25 pages The Curse (1946) - 3/5: Narrator in post-nuclear Europe describes the scene in a quaint town where a tombstone lays facing an approaching river. Who is buried there? 3 pages Summertime on Icarus (1960) - 3/5: `Advice at the front of the Spaceman's Manual- "When you don't know what to do, do nothing."' 11 pages Dog Star (1961) - 3/5: Man's best-friend remains faithful beyond death in the memory of a scientist in a moon base. 6 pages Hide and Seek (1948) - 3/5: Hunter recalls tale of a spy in pursuit towards Mars and the spy's clever survival on the moon on Phobos. 11 pages Out of the Sun (1957) - 4/5: Solar observation center on Mercury views a solar energy phenomenon. 7 pages Wall of Darkness (1946) - 5/5: Be sure to approach the dark unknown with enough tools, instruments and money to throw at the problem. Can the village philosophers untangle the mystery and tape the pieces together? 18 pages No Morning After (1953) - 4/5: A drunk receives dire message from the stars. Does he shrug it off and hit the bottle or does he warn the populous? Ask yourself which would make a better story. 6 pages The Possessed (1951) - 3/5: A Swarm of alien energy-like intelligences falls to Earth after escaping their stars destruction. One part of the Swarm begins to evolve a lizard while the rest sweep across the sea of stars to find a suitable intelligent host. What will become to the lizard's evolution and the rest of the Swarm's quest? 5 pages Death and the Senator (1960) - 3/5: Senator confronts his eventual death in a myriad of ways, comes to peace with it but is interrupted by a doctor who says he may be able to be saved. 20 pages Who's There (1958) - 3/5: Why cats make bad pets on earth or in space. 5 pages Before Eden (1960) - 4/5: Alien life on polar Venus proves to be resourceful. 11 pages Superiority (1948) - 4/5: War-torn aliens find themselves eager for new weapons, which they develop and try to implement, only to be defeated little by little by the persistent human force. 11 pages A Walk in the Dark (1945) - 4/5: A man confronts his imagination during a 4-mile walk in the pitch dark on a galaxy-edged planet, when he remembers a haunting tale of chitinous sounds beyond the arc of a flashlight... too bad he doesn't have a flashlight. 10 pages Call of the Stars (1957) - 3/5: Man seeks space-borne self-determination against the advice of his father. 4 pages Reluctant Orchid (1954) - 5/5: Wimpy Hercules becomes the owner of a carnivorous orchid but is persistently visited by his masculine aunt and her behemoth dogs. Shall we attempt to put one and tone together? 9 pages Encounter at Dawn (1950) - 2/5: Galactic Survey discovers another human-like species on a distant planet. How to befriend a simpleton, gain his trust and leave him in your dust. 11 pages "If I Forget Thee, Oh Earth..." (1950) - 3/5: Child reflects on humanity's post-apocalyptic planet with hopes of a brighter tomorrow. 5 pages Patent Pending (1953) - 2/5: Bar tale of a French invention which can record emotions. Lesson- Don't drink the drug you deal. 10 pages The Sentinel (1948) - 4/5: Lunar geologists spot a reflective point on a mountain and head off to investigate (being the trailblazer for 2001: Space Odyssey, you can imagine what it is). 10 pages Transience (1947) - 5/5: Drawn to the sea for destined for the stars. 6 pages The Star (1954) - 4/5: Priest exploring supernovae remnants finds a revelation. 6 pages
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A thought-provoking read, especially now...,
By A Customer
This review is from: Nine Billion Names of God (Hardcover)
It is 15 years since I read this book. The short story referred to in the title has been replaying itself in my mind, intiated by talk of the Human Genome project, and also by our proximity to the new Millenium. I have searched extensively for a copy of this book (I think my Mum threw out the old one!) without success. A great thought provoking read.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Great Short Stories, some that suffer from their age...,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Nine Billion Names of God (Paperback)
This book has some great short stories, my favorite being "The Wall of Darkness". It is about a strange and very small universe and what that could look like for the inhabitants exploring it. Any time AC Clarke writes about a fantastic science fiction, I know it to be realistic in the sense that it is within the realms of the scrutiny of science possible. That's what makes his stories so enjoyable.For those of you who love hard science fiction (science fiction stories with some existing science to back up the fiction) of which Sir Clarke I believe to be the best, some of these stories suffer from their age. "The Sentinel" which was expanded upon to make "2001 A Space Odyssey" was written in 1948. Science has learned a lot since that time, because of its age we are told that the moon had oceans and plant life in "The Sentinel". Some landmarks of the moon are in fact called seas although it is now been found to be the remnants of molten rock from possible collision in the past. It doesn't detract from the story that much but it does make you think, "hmmm... yes, they used to think that". Another story gives an incorrect date in which we may visit the moon since at the time these stories were written, we hadn't visited it yet. Again, these are great short stories, not on the cutting edge of science of course due to their age, but the author is stringent in using factual science of that day to craft his stories of which he does a great job. |
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The Nine Billion Names of God by Arthur C. Clarke (Paperback - June 1, 1974)
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