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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Visionary In Residence
Visionary in Residence is a collection that unites thirteen stories (published circa 1999-2005) by Bruce Sterling under one cover; two of these yarns also happen to be collaborations with his close friends Paul and Rudy. Audiences generally regard Sterling to be an author of science fiction, but his writing (continuing to transition into more alien forms of that genre)...
Published on March 24, 2006 by sfarmer76

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not as "visionary" as one would wish
Bruce is one of those authors I always approach hesitantly. When he's good, he's very good, but when he's not, he's . . . well, not terrible, but certainly uninteresting. That goes for both his novels and his short stories. As I've noted elsewhere, he's a kick to listen to in person at a con, but his ideas and enthusiasms and social concerns don't always translate well...
Published on September 14, 2006 by Michael K. Smith


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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Visionary In Residence, March 24, 2006
By 
sfarmer76 "sfarmer76" (Savannah, Georgia USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Visionary in Residence: Stories (Paperback)
Visionary in Residence is a collection that unites thirteen stories (published circa 1999-2005) by Bruce Sterling under one cover; two of these yarns also happen to be collaborations with his close friends Paul and Rudy. Audiences generally regard Sterling to be an author of science fiction, but his writing (continuing to transition into more alien forms of that genre) lately seems to congeal around disparate fields such as architecture, biology, design, environmentalism, and security.

"In Paradise," the lead story, is Sterling's strongest effort. Set amid a concourse of duty free shops, this narrative details the chance meeting of a nineteen year old Iranian beauty (Batool) and a twenty-six year old Texan plumber (Felix), and their subsequent love affair. Of course they can't converse with each other, without the help of two expensive Finnish cell phones that perform real-time translation on the fly, but that's the charm of the piece.

Second to "In Paradise," I think "The Growthing" is remarkable in terms of its overall texture. Set in a deserted Texas energy refinery that would be unrecognizable to today's industry vets, we get to share a tender vignette between biodome caretaker Milton and his teenage daughter Gretel before she's whisked away by a passing dirigible after her latest custody visit. Seems pretty tame on first read, but there are strange legal undercurrents coursing through the tale and an odd tacked on coda that offers redemption.

"Ivory Tower," is a funny squib first published in the British science weekly 'Nature.' The story revolves around ten thousand physicists self-educated by Internet, the manner in which they've leveraged their knowledge, and their formation of an academy in the Great Indian Desert. Two more 800 word pieces - "Message Found In A Bottle" and "Homo Sapiens Declared Extinct" - that are equally humorous, fill out Section Three, which is labeled as "Fiction for Scientists."

Of particular praise are the co-authored stories; The Scab's Progress (with Paul Di Filippo), and Junk DNA (with Rudy Rucker). Both of these stories are so strong that Bruce should really consider finding the time to co-author separate novels with each of these talented guys. I especially enjoyed the two female characters (Janna Gutierrez and Veruschka Zipkin) in Junk DNA, so I'd like to see them in a return outing. Two thumbs up for collaboration!

Now that I've encapsulated the weirder stories, let me tout one that's more mainstream. Code, set in the polished offices of Austin tech-startup Vintelix, finds Sterling taking us on a quirky romp after Employee #3 - a jumbo hippie coder named Louis - is found slumped over dead in his leather chair. The finding brings Van (a junior coder) closer to Julie (the receptionist) after the pair discovers LSD hidden in the unfortunate bloke's desk.

After reading The Growthing, you should probably skip ahead to Code before back-pedaling to read the hybrid "User-Centric," which begins with literary epistle (a series of emails between Engineer, Graphic Designer, Legal Expert, Marketer, Programmer, Social Anthropologist & Team Coordinator) about two hypothetical customers named "Al" and "Zelda," before morphing into a story about an oddly mismatched couple. Are these characters real people? The story leaves you wondering.

Rather than knock Bruce, I'll declare that "Luciferase" - previously published in SciFiction - seems out of character (too Disneyesque) for a Sterling story, note that I've read many of them. Talking bugs named Dolores, Peck, and Vinnie? Not really the kind of story you're likely to find podcast on EscapePod anytime soon. The trio that complete this volume ("The Necropolis of Thebes," "The Blemmye's Stratagem," "Luciferase,") while okay, won't get you stoked.

You should pick up Visionary In Residence if you're a science fiction fan. Each of Bruce's stories will transport you to interior landscapes that ripple with cheery qualities of both light and sound - places where the players struggle with unusual aspects of death or love - or quiet interludes where time itself seems to bend. The compendium reveals Sterling at his nadir. Grab some coffee, find a comfortable chair, and enjoy this eloquent softbound book.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not as "visionary" as one would wish, September 14, 2006
This review is from: Visionary in Residence: Stories (Paperback)
Bruce is one of those authors I always approach hesitantly. When he's good, he's very good, but when he's not, he's . . . well, not terrible, but certainly uninteresting. That goes for both his novels and his short stories. As I've noted elsewhere, he's a kick to listen to in person at a con, but his ideas and enthusiasms and social concerns don't always translate well into print. This collection of thirteen stories which first appeared in the past five or six years is divided thematically -- "Fiction for Scientists," "Design Fiction," "Architecture Fiction," etc. And there are several here that are great fun: "In Paradise" (love by means of real-time language translation in your cell phone), "Code" (boy-nerd meets girl-nerd), "The Necropolis of Thebes" (a very thoughtful look at "the old days" -- really old), and "The Denial" (actually a ghost story set in Ottoman times). One of the best, under the heading of "Ribofunk," is "Junk DNA," written with Rudy Rucker, which is about a high-tech start-up built around genomics instead of software; it's damaged, though, by the rather silly ending which makes me think Bruce simply got tired of writing it. The least-readable story, as it happens, is also about biotech -- "The Scab's Progress," with Paul Di Filippo, which made almost no sense at all to me. Also, if the author would just learn to write endings for his stories instead of just stopping his typing, I wouldn't have to keep turning the page, wondering if the rest of the story had been omitted.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great collection of stories, June 24, 2006
This review is from: Visionary in Residence: Stories (Paperback)
I really enjoyed this collection of short stories from Bruce Sterling. Thematically the stories range all over the place from post-human to ancient history and ancient alternate history. The thing that ties all these stories together and made the book so great for me was that these tales reflect many of the futurist ideas posited in his non-fiction work Tomorrow Now. If you haven't read Tomorrow Now I highly recommend it, it's a five star read all the way. Frankly, even though I tend to read more fiction than non-fiction, his Tomorrow Now was one of the better reads I've undertaken this year and the quality of the prose was shockingly good. For a non-fiction work on ideas and what the future may hold it couldn't have been more engaging, easy to read, and mind-expanding.

I read this collection shortly after Tomorrow Now and it felt to me as if they were almost complementary books. The non-fiction work describes many of things we may see in the future and the way society may change with new technologies, including fascinating ideas about the future of biotechnology and the changing nature of employment and what people may wind up doing on a day-to-day basis for work. His concept of work in the future is almost hard to grasp it is so alien, yet extrapolating from the changes over the past twenty years his ideas are entirely plausible too. The short stories take these ideas and wrap them up in engaging tales exploring how these changes affect discrete individuals; the fictional accounts cover the world changes from individual perspective rather than a general societal overview. Some of the stories are better than others naturally but there are some real gems in here, including a colloboration with Rudy Rucker and two stories set in the Middle East roughly 1200 and 1400 A.D. Don't worry, they're both still sci-fi, and expand on some of the better ideas on society and culture that Sterling comes up with. This is a great book, I enjoyed it a lot, and it's well worth the money, but for an even better appreciation I recommend reading Tomorrow Now first and then this one directly after. I am so glad that I did that way.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Extropian Infodump, January 2, 2007
This review is from: Visionary in Residence: Stories (Paperback)
Bruce Sterling is a brilliant futurist whose novels have defined cyberpunk, and have propelled science fiction into new ultra-scientific realms. However, his short stories are more varied but less groundbreaking, as can be seen in this rather uneven collection. The main problem is that several of the short stories herein were created for very specific niche publications, and some show signs of being subjected to space constraints or heavy-handed editing. For example, "Homo Sapiens Declared Extinct," "Ivory Tower," and "Message Found in a Bottle" are just too short to provide anything other than simplistic attempts at big statements on social problems. A couple of other stories here, "In Paradise" and "Code," offer up much more interesting stories and settings, only to end very abruptly with absolutely no conclusions for the characters or thematic ideas. Fortunately, the longer submissions here will be real treats to Sterling fans, and save the collection from oblivion. "The Blemmye's Strategem" is a winning piece of supernatural historical fiction that is quite outside Sterling's usual subject matter. Meanwhile, Sterling continues his futurist innovations in the adventurous "The Scab's Progress," co-written by Paul Di Filippo; and especially "Junk DNA," co-written by the bodaciously creative Rudy Rucker. Those longer and better-constructed stories save this collection and make it a worthy addition to Sterling's body of work. But most of the briefer submissions are barely memorable. [~doomsdayer520~]
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sterling Still One of Science Fiction's Best Short Story Writers, June 25, 2006
This review is from: Visionary in Residence: Stories (Paperback)
Although he remains one of my favorite writers, it's been years since I came across a Bruce Sterling book that I've felt quite enthusiastic about (Most notably his great novels "Heavy Weather", and especially "Holy Fire", which are undoubtedly two of his finest novels.), but now I have just finished reading one of his best short story collections; "Visionary in Residence". This may be his most impressive short story collection so far, illustrating his vast interest and literary range from post-cyberpunk science fiction to alternate history and even a mesmerizing ghost story which closes the collection ("The Denial"). Sterling writes with equal passion and sympathy for near future computer hackers caught in the latest biotech dot.com craze ("The Scab's Progress", "Junk DNA") as well as Christian and Muslim warriors united in a brief crusade against an unholy, unearthly terror ("The Blemmye's Stratagem"). Among his most impressive stories are his two long tales co-written with friends and fellow cyberpunk writers Paul Di Fillipo ("The Scab's Progress") and Rudy Rucker ("Junk DNA") which mark his literary evolution from a writer of cyberpunk to ribofunk fiction. My own personal favorite is Sterling's alternate history/alien invasion tale "The Blemmye's Stratagem", which is set soon after the Muslim reconquest of Jerusalem from European Crusaders. Another enjoyable tale is "Code", a riveting boy meets girl internet saga in which a computer programmer has to deal with the deadliest creature known to male computer geeks: a lovely, smart woman. The weakest tale in "Visionary in Residence", "Luciferase", is the one which doesn't quite sound like it belongs in a Bruce Sterling short story collection; instead, it looks more like a decent attempt at writing a short story consistent with the themes covered in the Disney film "A Bug's Life". Fans of Bruce Sterling's writing - both new and old - should be as impressed as I with his latest short story collection.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Maybe his best collection yet., January 24, 2008
I've grown quite tired of Sterling's novels. With the exception of the "Schismatrix" material (with I think is his masterpiece), his long-form fiction often degenerates into rambling narrative, inconsistent characters, and non-endings.

But his short-story material is wonderful. I can't think of another writer who is so consitently imaginative, entertaining, funny, and insightful. I've enjoyed all of his collections, and none more than this.

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3.0 out of 5 stars some interesting stories but won't drag you back for more., August 23, 2007
This review is from: Visionary in Residence: Stories (Paperback)
This collection of short stories was somewhat disappointing.
For the most part the stories do have interesting plot points or interesting premises highlighting just how out of the box Sterling can be sometimes. However the stories generally seem to run out of steam near the end and often come up feeling somewhat contrived or rushed.
The standout exception is "luciferase" which is *so* different that it deserves a read.
Overall a good light read but it probably won't drag you back for a 2nd look.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Very hit or miss, August 6, 2007
This review is from: Visionary in Residence: Stories (Paperback)
"Visionary in Residence" (modest to a fault, Bruce is) is a real mixed bag. There are two or three nifty stories here, and a bunch of forgettable stuff.

Sterling seems to be writing fiction out of some sense of obligation these days, not out of a love of it. His old stuff is often great, but anymore he obviously enjoys his Wired columns, his many (many) tech conference keynotes, and his pure design criticism (like the excellent Shaping Things) way more. It's almost like he's writing these short stories in order to keep his SF Writer's Club membership card active or something.
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7 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Oh Bruce Sterling, what happened to you?, May 11, 2006
By 
Russ B. Gibson "Nikos" (Hattiesburg, Mississippi) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Visionary in Residence: Stories (Paperback)
I have thoroughly enjoyed most of Sterling's past works, but this compilation of short stories was just awful. Starting with the pretentious title (why not just name it "Genius Author" or "I am a Brilliant Wordsmith"), every page I turned left me more aghast. Most of the stories read like the rough draft a college freshman would turn in for his first creative writing course. The sheer silliness of Luciferase made me put the book down for three days. The quality of these stories makes me think that Sterling needed quick money for a down payment on a new car.
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Visionary in Residence: Stories
Visionary in Residence: Stories by Bruce Sterling (Paperback - March 1, 2006)
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