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Wireless (Hardcover)

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4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Prolific novelist Stross pauses to collect short stories that have not (yet) been stitched up into his longer work. Stories that move the U.S.–U.S.S.R. conflict onto a massive disk in another galaxy (Locus Award–winner Missile Gap), offer a spam-filter solution to the Fermi paradox (MAXOS) and suggest clever bargains with the devil in a newly frozen Scotland (Snowball's Chance) demonstrate Stross's ability to crisscross genres, blending SF, fantasy, horror and espionage. He also pays homage to his literary forebears, combining Lovecraft and the Iran-Contra scandal (The Colder War) and bringing in Carl Sagan and Stephen Jay Gould as characters. Though individual pieces are well-done and deservedly popular, the collection has an overall sense of early drafts and reworkings of other pieces, as with Trunk and Disorderly, a P.G. Wodehouse–on–Mars test run for 2008's Saturn's Children. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Review

"A new kind of future requires a new breed of guide-someone like Stross."
-Popular Science

"The act of creation seems to come easily to Charles Stross...[He] is peerless at dreaming up devices that could conceivably exist in six, 60 or 600 years' time."
-New York Times

"Where Charles Stross goes today, the rest of science fiction will follow tomorrow."
-Gardner Dozois, Editor, Asimov's Science Fiction magazine

"Charles Stross is the most spectacular sciencefiction writer of recent years."
-Vernor Vinge, author of Rainbows End

"One of the most flexible and intellectually powerful authors operating in modern SF."
-SF Diplomat

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Ace Hardcover (July 7, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0441017193
  • ISBN-13: 978-0441017195
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.4 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #159,923 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

More About the Author

Charles Stross
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A mixed bag from an endlessly diverting author, July 9, 2009
By Joe Slater (Melbourne Australia) - See all my reviews
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I've been a fan of Charles Stross writing ever since I encountered his homage to Lovecraft in _A Colder War_. This volume reprints that story together with eight others of varying lengths. If you prefer novel-length stories you should be aware that two of the titles (_Missile Gap_ and _Palimpsest_) are substantial enough to hold their own with much longer works.

The first story, _Missile Gap_, is set on an Earth that has been translated to a giant flat disk and set in an ocean with many other translated worlds. It's a little bleak - don't expect a bunch of plucky humans to triumph because of their native can-do-it-ness. The vast godlike forces that could do something like this would be practically oblivious to the survival of species, let alone individuals.

The second is _Rogue Farm_: A farmer has to deal with a post-human entity that wants to use his farm as a launching site. It's a very short (and light) work and I didn't really care for it.

_A Colder War_ is one of my favorite stories. Charles Stross uses Lovecraft's stories as the basis for an alternate history Cold War thriller. It's *very* bleak - the best possible outcome is the annihilation of humanity. I'd love to see this as a graphic novel.

_Maxos_ is a vignette originally published in _Nature_. It's quite funny and deserves more elaboration.

_Down on the Farm_ is set in Stross's Laundry universe (_The Atrocity Archives_, _The Jennifer Morgue_) which use Lovecraftian horror as their background (they're related but not connected to _A Colder War_ which also appears in this collection). The Laundry stories seem to follow a standard pattern - the narrator is thrust into a crisis where things are not what they appear and he has to save the day through improvisation, facing eldritch horrors which are often less frightening than the nightmare that is government work. I liked this story, but it doesn't really stand alone. I'd recommend reading Stross's _The Atrocity Archives_ first.

_Unwirer_ was written with Cory Doctorow. The hero is part of a team that sets up wireless networks against government and MPAA interference. It's surprising how well the two authors' styles merge but it's not a very deep story.

_Sonwball's Chance_ is a deal-with-the-de'il story (I once read that every author has to do one of these) that taps into Stross's interest in planetary engineering and government bureaucracy. It's short and slight but worth the read.

_Trunk and Disorderly_ is a Wodehouse pastiche. I used to like Wodehouse but I just couldn't get into this story. The author notes its relationship to _Saturn's Children_: if you were a big fan of the latter you might appreciate this more.

The last story, _Palimpsest_ is nearly worth the price of admission by itself. It's more than a little reminiscent of a famous story by Isaac Asimov but so, so much better. The key to time travel is held by an organisation that wants to stop humanity going extinct. To do this it periodically re-seeds Earth with populations taken from earlier iterations of humanity and, between epochs, does things like re-ignite ths sun (which ought to have burned out within a few billion years). This story has it all - deep time, stellar engineering, time travel, paradoxes, the Singulaity and more. The author notes that it's a novella that wanted to be a novel, and I think it feels a little constrained. None the less, it's an amazing read and highly recommended.

I gave this book five stars. There were a few stories I didn't care for, but that's true of any collection. The gems of this collection would be worth buying on their own and justify the ranking.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential reading if you enjoy modern science fiction, July 21, 2009
From the short and funny MAXOS to the long and dark Missile Gap, Wireless is an amazing tour through Stross' futuristic world view.

Central to this view is the observation that if there is anything out there in the stars it will surely defy our comprehension. To some extent, Stross is an atheist theologist. He draws equally from the various Abrahamic traditions as well as literary, pop, and tech culture and speculates on what an incomprehensible godlike intelligence could be like. When he isn't exploring Lovecraftian horrors or post-singularity strong-AI, we get a glimpse into the near future or alternative near-pasts.

From a content to volume perspective, Wireless is the anti-Baroque Cycle. While both Stephenson's and Stross' work cover a broad conceptual space, Stephenson does so in a single story that spans three volumes and thousands of pages. Stross delivers numerous stories that together fit within hundreds of pages.

Readers familiar with Stross' previously published works will enjoy the new explorations of familiar ideas presented in Wireless. Readers encountering Stross for the first time will have an opportunity to drink from the fire hose, one gulp at a time.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stoss always delivers the goods, July 15, 2009
By Matthew T. Carpenter (San Antonio, TX, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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For a fan of Lovecraftian fiction there are some good reasons to get this collection. If you don't have a copy of Toast, Wireless will give you a print copy of A Colder War. In my view this is one of the most brilliant Cthulhu mythos stories of the modern era For other top stories I suggest The Doom That Came to Innsmouth by McNaughton and Final Draft by Annadale). It is true to Lovecraft's cosmicism and to his essential bleakness. It also was genre bending when written, in the same sense Delta Green was. The nightmares lurking behind corners are not secret; they are well realized by governments that try to keep them secret or exploit them for gain. Another good reason to get this book is Down on the Farm, the latest Laundry novella. If you have The Atrocity Archive and The Jennifer Morgue, and are impatiently awaiting The Fuller Memorandum, here is your latest fix. So far Down on the Farm is unavailable in print elsewhere. As is typical for his Laundry series, I was grandly entertained. Finally, some might argue, but I think the cosmic vision of Missile Gap has echoes of Lovecraft for its non-humancentric viewpoint.

There was not one story here I did not thoroughly enjoy, although Trunk and Disordely was amusing rather than hilarious. Fans of Wodehouse may like it better. Palimpsest has many similarities to Accelerando. It seems to me that Stross is just seething with clever ideas and short stories allows him to explore those that might not sustain a novel. If you have not sampled his compact and witty prose before, here's your chance.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars More great work by Stross
Disclosure - I am a Charlie Stross fan. Read this review with that in mind.

This is a collection of 9 short stories and novellas. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Alex Tolley

5.0 out of 5 stars awe-inspiring scope
Amazing book. As we talk about past masters like Heinlein and Asimov, so future generations will speak of Charles Stross.
Published 1 month ago by R. R. Felty

5.0 out of 5 stars Astonishing short stories
A selection of speculative fiction brings together a range of Stross' fiction, from a time-travel novella to a secret service agent's adventure and an example of different... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Midwest Book Review

5.0 out of 5 stars Not Free SF Reader
An extremely fine collection, with a 3.83 average. An interesting range of material both in length, going from vignette to long novella, and content, from humorous science... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Blue Tyson

4.0 out of 5 stars fine science fiction collection
The nine entries affirm the author's strong scientific and hi tech foundations that make his science fiction novels so fascinating. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Harriet Klausner

2.0 out of 5 stars Mixed bag. Not all that good, I'm afraid.
The book begins and ends with redo stories. In the beginning it's 1,001,979 AD, and the hive mind is using a process of repetition to teach the primates to stop throwing crap at... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Patrick Carroll

3.0 out of 5 stars Great stories, terrible Kindle formatting
This is a lovely buffet for Stross fans: a couple of stories involving the Laundry ("the inmates here are not only mad: they're computer science graduates"), some geopolitical... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Richard Clark

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