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Seek! Selected Nonfiction [Hardcover]

Rudy Rucker (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 28, 1999
The essays and memoirs collected in Seek! trace Rudy Rucker's trajectory through the final decade of the second millennium. His topics include artificial life, chaos, the big bang, Pieter Brueghel, the church of the subgenius, live sex, mathematics, science fiction, and TV evangelism. A computer scientist and programmer, Rucker is an articulate, engaging guide to the world on either side of the computer screen.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Rudy Rucker, author of the Software tetralogy and White Light, possesses a quality that could endanger his cyberpunk credibility: enthusiasm. No sullen antihero, Dr. Rucker is a computer science professor and a devoted family man, but his fiction has kept many a reader up all night with visions of humans uploading their consciousnesses into robots that eventually return the favor. His collection of short nonfiction, Seek!, is just as clear and sassy as his novels. Whether he's having visions in Yosemite with his son, flipping the bird at Jerry Falwell's second in command, or playing with his favorite artificial life forms, Rucker seems to know he'll be telling us about it later; his uncanny knack for perfectly apt descriptions must arise from this knowledge. Once you've been told that the "Mandelbrot set is shaped like big fat warty buttocks ..." you're not likely to forget it.

Divided into three sections ("Science," "Life," and "Art"), Seek! reads like a user's guide to the New Renaissance: after reading "A Brief History of Computers," we can move on to "Cyberculture in Japan," visit Industrial Light and Magic, and examine Brueghel's Peasant Dance in depth. All are infused with Rucker's intense delight and frustration with the things and people of this world; they inevitably provoke the kind of staring-into-space reveries long thought lost to our youth. He provides Web page URLs so that readers will have natural starting points for continuing research, including his own Web site's free software for playing with cellular automata and other funky almost-living critters. As Rucker says to his students, referring to the boundary between order and chaos (and providing a title for this book): Seek Ye the Gnarl! --Rob Lightner

From Library Journal

Sf novelist Rucker (Freeware) is also a professor of computer science at San Jose State University, CA, and an industrial-strength programmer. In this collection of his nonfiction, Rucker ruminates on a variety of topics, mostly digital. His thoughts range from Silicon Valley where he has lived since 1946 to hacking, cyberpunking, the ghost of Philip K. Dick, and art in Amsterdam. You don't have to install anything other than your own mindAand the effect will be longer-lasting than most net-related IPOs. A very good book, for all libraries.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 356 pages
  • Publisher: Four Walls Eight Windows; First. edition (May 28, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1568581335
  • ISBN-13: 978-1568581330
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,481,605 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A good choice for Rucker fans, February 3, 2000
By 
This review is from: Seek! Selected Nonfiction (Hardcover)
Rudy Rucker is a wonderful writer, and judging from his writing, an excellent teacher. If all math professors were like him, there would be a lot more mathematicians, physicists and engineers around. And you've got to love a guy who can characterize chaotic phenomena as "gnarly".

"Seek!" is a collection of essays on various topics, published and unpublished, and therein lies one of the problems: A lot of these essays would have been better off remaining unpublished. They're just not that interesting or well done. Even some of the published essays should have stayed buried in the pulps where they were printed. The book is of course required reading for die-hard Rucker fans, but the general reader would be better off sticking with his more carefully edited books.

His history of computers, for example, is a completely unoriginal rehashing of the standard hardwware-based story. There's absolutely no point in reprinting it, particuarly as he has nothing to add to a thousand other books.

There's another problem as well. Like many very bright academics, Rucker seems to believe that skill in one area- mathematics- makes him an expert in all areas. Unfortunately there are some (history, economics, political science, psychology) where he is not terribly well read, and again, like many academics form the hard sciences he tends to view the social sciences as something you can just handle intuitively. Thus his views on matters of economics and policy tend to be the kind you get from enthusiastic college sophmores. He can't admit that someone could hold views opposed to his and still be a decent person; anyone who disagrees with him is basically evil. But that's par for course when you spend much of your life in academia.

Still, it's an interesting collection, and there are a few gems scattered amidst the dross. His A-life introduction is imaginative and particularly well done. My advice: Skip the hardcover and get the paperback.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Reminiscent of Richard Feynman, August 9, 2002
By 
Diego Banducci (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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Rudy Rucker is a mathematician and computer scientist who also writes science fiction. Unfortunately, he is so well known for his SF writings that his reputation in that area tends to swamp recognition of his accomplishments in mathematics and computer science, as is evidenced by other reviews on this page.

Rucker's mathematical writings tend to focus on the more esoteric subjects of infinity and the fourth dimension. They include: (1) "Geometry, Relativity, and the Fourth Dimension" (1977); (2) "The Fourth Dimension: A Guided Tour of the Higher Universes" (1985); (3) "Mind Tools: The Five Levels of Mathematical Reality" (1988); (4) "Infinity and the Mind: The Science and Philosophy of the Infinite" by Rudy Rucker (1995); and (5) "Software Engineering and Computer Games" (To be published in Nov 2002). That he is regarded as a serious mathematician is evidenced by the fact that "Infinity and the Mind" is published by the Princeton University Press, one of the best publishers of books on mathematics, engineering and science in the world.

In the area of software, Rucker is known for his participation in developing "Chaos" ands "CA (Cellular Automata)Lab", two highly innovative software programs that came out about 20 years ago. Cellular automata, which produce screen images that appear to be randomly generated patterns (in fact, the patterns are generated in accordance with simple rules) have been studied seriously by scientists (including Richard Feynman) interested in determining the patterns that underlie life. In fact, one of the earliest CA games was called "The Game of Life."

Like Feynman, Rucker is a free spirit, interested in virtually everything he encounters in life. Fortunately for the rest of us, he also likes to write about it. Among the topics treated in this collection of his essays are: (1) what it's like to live in Lynchburg, VA with Jerry Falwell; (2) a visit to a semiconductor clean room; (3) his beloved dog, Arf; (4) the paintings of Peter Breughel; (5) visits to Japan, where Rucker's S/F is immensely popular; (6) a live sex show in Manhattan; (7) his life as a hippie and abuse of drugs; and of course (8) thoughts on the possible uses of cellular automata.

Through it all comes the impression of a very good, very open, mind at work. I suspect that he really only writes to please himself; but fortunately he shares it with the rest of us.

Readers with more of an interest in Rucker's S/F writings should consider buying "Gnarl!", a companion volume of essays on that topic.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An enjoyable trip with Mr Rucker, October 28, 1999
This collection of essays is well worth reading if you're any sort of fan of Rudy Rucker. The essays are very wide ranging, and I particularly liked the travel essays in the section "Life", which were full of interesting observations and characters (especially the moody Robert Anton Wilson and the inscrutable Terence McKenna in Portugal). The essays about Rucker's trips to Japan give a unique perspective on the mixture of old and new culture that he found there.

I found some of the earlier material on cellular automata and other mathematical curiosities to be less interesting, probably because I have never explored them, and I can't share the enthusiasm Mr Rucker has for them. On the other hand, his essay on the history of computing I found fascinating.

Overalll, I came away feeling that these essays were written by a very real person, one who has managed to enjoy the fame he has achieved largely as a writer. He is not backward in expressing his admiration for the opposite sex, and his openness and candour is sometimes startling compared to other more conservative modern essayists.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In 1986, it became unfeasible for me to continue living as an unemployed cyberpunk writer in Lynchburg, Virginia. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
brain plug, cellular automaton rule, saucer aliens, logical depth, computer reality, inflationary universe, cellular automata, difference engine, hollow earth, analytical engine
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, San Francisco, Great Work, Phil Dick, Silicon Valley, Hello Kitty, Jerry Falwell, John Walker, Silicon Embrace, Peasant Dance, Rudy Rucker, Stephen Wolfram, William Gibson, Bruce Sterling, Los Alamos, New Edge, Perplexing Poultry, Barney's Beanery, Gold Disco, John von Neumann, Allen Ginsberg, John Shirley, Jurassic Park, Palo Alto, Santa Cruz
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