14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Nice, not great., June 24, 2005
Overall, I give the book four stars. Here's a brief summary of its contents, with each story/essay independently rated. From * "I did not like it at all" to ***** "I loved it". I was expecting something like Kiln People.
The Giving Plague: A scientist tries to avoid catching a plague in which discovery he took part. ***
Myth Number 21: A super short story. To say more would spoil it. *
Dr. Pak's Preschool: Early stimulation on babies is taken to the extreme. ****
Detritus Affected: Some archaeologists in the near future make grim discoveries at a site. ***
The Dogma of Otherness: An essay about the newness of caring for other. **
Sshhh...: Humanity looks for its secret unique talent in the Universe. *****
Those Eyes: A radio talk show profoundly affect a UFO crew. ****
What to Say to a UFO: An essay about how the story came to be. ***
Bonding to Genji: Introduction to the world of Genji. *****
The Warm Space: In the future, natural humans will be left out of the space race from robo humans, so a man makes a choice to be remembered. ***** The best of the book.
Whose Millennium? An essay on Y2K and its relative irrelevance from a millennial standpoint. It was a good one before y2k. **
NatuLife: A city dweller and his ancient virtual world. ***
Piecework: Using natural resources for production. *****
Science versus Magic: An essay comparing Science and Magic. **
Bubbles: One stranded spaceship makes an astounding discovery. ****
Ambiguity: An scholar discovers he's done more than he thought he would. **
What Continues... and What Fails... Evolution on a universal scale. *****
The Commonwealth of Wonder: An essay talking about ideas that spread and other topics. **
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Hot and Cold, June 28, 2006
David Brin is certainly a talented author, but there are far too many preachy spots in this book for my taste. That he is a disciple of Richard Dawkins was evident from a line in "The Giving Plague" taken directly from the title of Dawkins' book, "The Selfish Gene". He makes it obvious by the final essay.
He also appears to like the surprise twist at the end of the story as several of these short stories have them. The end of "Dr. Pak's Preschool" seemed to me to be a bit contrived, as did the end of the (much better) "The Warm Space", but "Piecework" was such a fabulous, delightful story that I read it several times over even before I went on to finish the book. "NatuLife" was also a fabulous story with many layers of meaning and significance. A fascinating premise that first appears in "Ambiguity" takes a decidedly preachy turn in "What Continues...and What Fails...", a story that crystalizes the author's (and Dawkins') views on evolution.
When it comes to the essays, "The Dogma of Otherness" is both clever and interesting. Brin's sense of humor comes through quite well. Starting with "Whose Millenium" the essays get preachy though, and the mask came off in the final one which was both predictable and boring for anyone who has taken part in internet debates on evolution or religion.
I own this book, having picked it up when the local library discarded it to make room for others. Most of the stories are definitely worth reading, but it isn't likely to find a permanent spot on my shelves either.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good, provocative and unexpected, September 28, 1997
I've tried to read David Brin books before and found them either too subtle for me, or just plain boring. Though, I have read the blurbs on many of his books, and always thought he had some surprising ideas -- as if he'd been practicing those lateral-thinking puzzles for years. I was quite surprised to find a great collection of very provocative ideas that kept me interested all the way through. From a Japanese culture where the ultimate work-ethic means babies are tutored within the womb and are hooked up to computers at their birth, to "organic humans" discovering themselves useful again after years of uselessness in a culture and society of ultimate "cryo-mechanical humans": I was impressed. He even touches on theories of the existence of the entire universe(s) in a highly entertaining way. My recommendation is forget his longer (and long-winded) novels and devour his short-fiction. The ideas/stories in this collection are crystalised and involving. This one may actually cause me to look more closely at his other novels...
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