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Uplink [Paperback]

Jane S. Fancher (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 1992
Investigating some disruptions in the vital interstellar data 'Net, Admiral Loren Cantrell must rely on information obtained from Stephen Ridenour, the hostile young genius in charge of solving HuteNamid's mysteries.

UpLink
'NetWalkers Original Series: Book Two

    The colonists of HuteNamid, descendants of Earth's Native Americans, asked only one thing of the Alliance in return for the vital job of planet-busting: that the world they were given to tame be viable for human life without terraforming.
    The planet they received is a veritable Garden of Eden.
    Or is it?
    Admiral Loren Cantrell thought she had her mission well under control: She had Stephen Ridenour's report ready for the 'NetAT, and she had the local governor's daughter as a stanch ally. She knew how the data was disappearing...now she had to learn why and who.
    As she pursues these questions, Stephen sets out on a quest of his own: he might have solved Cantrell's problem, but his own remains.
    Little do they know that Stephen's past and Cantrell's present are on a collision course...with the future of the ComNet alliance hanging in the balance.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"Reads like Cherryh near her own top form."
--Locus

"Highly entertaining." --Science Fiction Chronicle

From the Author

The Native American Connection
    While I was living in Oklahoma, before I began writing, I had the chance to go to a local powwow with a group of authors and fans. I was rather startled when one of those authors began complaining about the costumes of the participants, beautiful things of feathers and beads and glittering fabrics. It was those fabrics she disdained. Lame, sequins...spandex.
    They weren't, so she claimed, "authentic."
    I was...speechless (an extremely rare state, as those who know me will attest.) This was a living breathing growing culture, not some reconstructionist group. Of course it was "authentic" to use any fabric available to them. Why not plastic feathers, while they were at it, if that's what they wanted? These were the people who defined authentic!
    And thus were the seeds for HuteNamid's Ethnic Reconstructionist colonists planted.
    Or rather, the seeds of their unique philosophy. My interest in Native Americans was piqued long before that.
    Ever since I read Andre Norton's Beast Master, (i.e. since dinos ruled) I've had a soft spot in my heart for the Navaho and for Native Americans in general. My classes in Anthropology and personal reading only added to that admiration...and regret. Because much that we could have gained from mutual respect and sharing of ideas and philosophies has been lost. The cultural genocide perpetrated by well-meaning (and not so well-meaning) elders on both sides of the cultural divide came close to losing a precious mindset, a mindset that is a valuable resource within the pool of human knowledge...not to mention leaving a generation culturally adrift.
    It was only natural, once I conceived of the Ethnic Reconstructionist Movement that I'd do something with all the thoughts and emotions accumulated over thirty-five years. My experience at the powwow just gave it all a focus and, a year later, when I began GroundTies, it all fell into place at last.
    Yet another reason I love writing!

Product Details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Warner Books Inc (Mm) (April 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0446362557
  • ISBN-13: 978-0446362559
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.1 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,298,723 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

On October 24, 1988 in Oklahoma City, OK, at a suggestion from SF author C.J. Cherryh, I began writing. I kept writing because two hours after starting, I had to find out what happened. A little over a year later, I was the startled owner of a three book contract based on the rough draft of my first novel.

I've been writing ever since.

What appeals to me about writing in general is the constant challenge. I'm a generalist and writing is the one thing that will happily use every bit of information and experience you have to put into it. It's constant problem solving, method acting and soul-searching all rolled up into one 24/7 job.

What I love about writing SF/F is...everything. I love the optimism of believing there is a future for humanity. I love the challenge of imagining what that future might be. But most of all, I love the thrill of exploring that future with the interesting and courageous people I find living in it.

But SF/F has another, less obvious, appeal: the ability to write with a social conscience without preaching. It lets writers create worlds in which they can shed light on aspects of current society in a less charged environment. Its a way to help raise awareness without pointing fingers at anyone.

Yes, I have same gender relationships. Yes, I have gender-identification-challenged characters. Yes, sex and obsessive attraction are definitely issues in my books, as are power and its use and abuse. But the genre's one-step-removed perspective also lets me explore the human ramifications of a too-effective educational system (be careful what you wish for), or the curious problems of being siblings and growing up with the kind of misconceptions only close association can create, or what it means to a culture to lose an entire generation's knowledge.

Can you do this in contemporary fiction? Absolutely. But SF/F lets you add extreme ramifications...like what if those sibling misconceptions were suddenly stripped away with the ability to know exactly what those sibs were thinking? What if the educational system were so effective, the subsequent misinformation threatened the very fabric of the universe itself?

In my contemporary vampire fantasy...I hesitate to call it urban fantasy, because in all honesty, it hasn't the right tropes...I'm enjoying exploring the perspective of virtual immortality and what might make life worth living after three thousand years.

And with SF/F you can do all this while have a rip-roaring adventure! What more can a writer ask for?

My formal educational background is in Math, Physics, Astrophysics and Anthropology. I've raised and trained horses, flown planes, and at 51, took up figure skating. I love building things, from costumes to computers, model ships to koi ponds. I play a little guitar, some piano and like to sing.

I actually got started in the publishing world doing art. I worked on WaRP Graphics' Elfquest, helping with inking on the last few volumes of the original black and white, also helping with the colors in the original color volumes. After that, I moved on to my own project, an adaptation of C.J. Cherryh's first novel, Gate of Ivrel.

These days, after many years away from art, I find myself returning to it to do covers for my newest venture, Closed Circle Publications. A couple of years ago, C.J., Lynn Abbey and I decided to join the ebook movement and bring out both our orphaned backlist and some new works that weren't quite what NY was looking for but which our loyal readers were demanding.

I absolutely love hearing from my readers. My blog should echo here, but feel free to join us at:
http://www.janefancher.com/TheCaptainAndLime/

 

Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Satisfying conclusion to Groundties, April 6, 2011
Hooray, Uplink is now available as an E-book!
It's the second part of the story arc begun in GroundTies ('NetWalkers: Original Series), and brings a very satisfactory conclusion to several of the story-lines started in Groundties. That's not to say it's the end of the story in this intriguing future universe, as there are enough possibilities for further developments, but it does answer those reviewers of Groundties who felt the story wasn't finished at the end of that book. It wasn't, and here's the rest of it. So please read Groundties first, then follow it right away with Uplink.
It's a very interesting, multi-faceted world, in which the ramifications of believable future tech are explored, such as the internet, virtual reality, people living in space and on many settled planets; and especially the impact on different people and societies. Though the background is a believable hard-SF one, the story is mostly centered on the characters, their actions and their development.
The people are well-rounded, real and individual, with their own quirks and obsessions, and their emotional and mental development is what drives the story.
The third book, Harmonies of the Net, is now available for Kindle as well (Harmonies of the 'Net ('NetWalkers: Original Series)). It continues the characters' development, gives some more insights into their backgrounds, and introduces some new aspects that broaden the scope of the story. In this sense, Uplink can be said to end at a resting plateau instead of at the summit; but still, for me, it did bring the story to more of a conclusion than the first book.
As I'm no good at writing reviews without spoilers I'll stop here, and only say: if you like complex, character-driven stories with fast action, plenty of suspense, and a believable future-tech background, buy both Groundties (Amazon Kindle store link GroundTies ('NetWalkers: Original Series)) and Uplink and you won't be disappointed.
I read it fast the first time for the action and suspense, because I wanted to find out what happens next; and then found it well-worth rereading for more nuance.
For people elsewhere in the world, who haven't got a Kindle: the printed book is becoming rare, but sometimes still available secondhand (look at Uplink), or you can get an e-pub version direct from the authors at www.closed-circle.net.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Uplink, follows Groundties: a wonderful set of books, April 5, 2011
A complex story requires room to develop...and this is the second of the three books of the original Groundties trilogy---in which the personal burden of genius comes up against the moves of power-brokers who see change as a threat to everything they've got.
But this time genius has been there, seen that, and is figuring out the game.
They're going to like that far less.

A remarkable middle book in a finished trilogy. Have no fear you'll be left hanging.

This one comes with the highest recommendation.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars GroundTies is better, April 15, 2011
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
****contains spoilers****

I had a bit of a problem with UpLink. I found it much more difficult to like than GroundTies.

The biggest area of concern for me this time was not the plot, but rather, my reader expectations of science fiction and literature in general. Why do I read these kinds of works? Does UpLink satisfy those expectations?

I enjoy sci-fi/fantasy as an escapism. Live another life. Go to impossible places to do impossible things. Be inspired when heroes overcome overwhelming odds. Marvel as those victories or failures change them in surprising ways.

UpLink stops being that kind of story once it enters into this intense focus on Stephen Ridenour as a damaged human being. It unbalanced the recipe for science fiction and becomes something else. It's a character driven plot, with sci-fi elements that explain the back story for the character's flaws, set in a sci-fi universe.

But the story loses its external focus and drive on the problems at hand and instead turns inward to the hero's struggles as the solution to the plot problems. Granted, that's how good fiction should work-- but this book takes that premise too far-- it goes too deep. Unfortunately what we find inside our hero is not inspiring or uplifting or honestly addressed -- in the end of all fiction, that is a really important element. Great fiction resolves character too.

Characters with secrets are intriguing. Characters who have dark pasts and suffer from them can be very attractive. We can even like characters who will never overcome their damage and in the end succumb to it--because they show us they are strong and have no need of our pity and never give in to their own self-pity.

Yet, I really feel like Ridenour is a failed hero.

So what does that mean? We have anti-hero characters in fiction all the time. No, this is a little different. He's a protagonist who is very hard to like--yet designed to be a hero, the good guy, someone we should like and pull for.

In UpLink we can feel many things about Ridenour but liking him is a stretch. We pity him in the first book because he's been unjustly damaged. He's weak. But then in the second, he does some terrible things and turns more toward a dark protagonist. When I say he does terrible things, I mean terrible things for a hero/protagonist to do: the cave scene with the drug "accident" and Anevai, the "seduction" scene with Wesley. Sorry, but these are really just selfish, self-preserving acts. They are cruel and painful to the other person involved. They are actions that clearly demonstrate our hero is in denial about his personal truths; they are painful to him and to everyone around him, including the reader.

My big, big problem here is that these issues are absolutely not resolved in any meaningful fashion. I can forgive plot resolutions that fail-- character resolutions are much harder to forgive because they demand so much personal investment.

All we get are excuses from Stephen and I can only assume we are meant to let him off the hook because of his "issues." Wesley, Anevai, Cantrel--all these characters seem to pity him instead of hate him because they inexplicably love him.

But look at this from an objective reader's standpoint. When were we ever given a chance to love him? Where inside of all that angst were we shown something of his true worth? Where are his redeeming qualities, his strength of character, his moment of taking action that shows us he has the capability of rising up and meeting the challenges set before him?

If not those, then where at least is his charm? His self-deprecating sense of humor? A sparkly coat and a strong jawline is not enough.

We just don't get much of anything to like about him-- all we get to know about him from his actions (where true character peeks through) are that he's insecure, depends on drugs to make life bearable, is incredibly defensive when people are nice to him and has some awful secrets that have left him an emotionally crippled child in a man's body--who has no business getting into an adult relationship as long as he is this messed up. (Wake up, Wesser.)

We can't love him just because everyone else in the story loves him--we must be shown why he's worthy of our time through his own actions of goodness or strength. He's got to earn it. For some readers, heavily flawed character weaknesses doesn't incite sympathy or empathy--just scorn. (I guess I fall into that category, but in my defense, there was an awful lot of rehashing memories, dreams, flashbacks, sudden panic attacks and lashing out at people just trying to help. A little angst goes a long way for me.)

Add to this the unfortunate fact that Ridenour's long suffering backstory has more drama and tension that the real time storyline and it's clear why UpLink missed the mark-- for me anyway.

If this story were actually plot-driven sci-fi and we had some real action, intrigue, suspense, mortal danger, kick-ass aliens, big guns, explosions, space cruiser battles--then who cares about Ridenour's anti-hero/dark protagonist status---because quite frankly---he'd have no time to whine about his deficits. He'd handle whatever issues he needed to handle at the end of a gun or by running away. That's the great thing about sci-fi. It can cover a lot of flaws in an entertaining fashion.

So in the end, I have to reluctantly say this book did not work as I'd hoped for after reading GroundTies. It did not fail on every level, but where it did fail it obviously struck a too sensitive nerve with me. I actually hate to be so critical, but with issues this powerful having been brought to the forefront for hundreds of pages-- there is a real responsibility to actually deal with them.

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