Signs of Life

2.7 out of 5 stars (5)
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Book overview

Thousands of light years from Earth, the surviving crew and passengers of an interstellar cruiser land widely dispersed on Rhomary Land and must struggle to be reunited with one another and with the descendants of the original interstellar crew that had been marooned on the planet. Reprint.

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Cherry Wilder was an important writer of science fiction and fantasy novels and short fiction in the last quarter of the twentieth century. A writer whose work both entertained and also challenged rigid social mores, her best-known works are the Rulers of Hylor trilogy, a high fantasy work comprised of A Princess of the Chameln, Yorath the Wolf and The Summer’s King and the science fiction first-contact Torin trilogy comprised of The Luck of Brin’s Five, The Nearest Fire and The Tapestry Warriors. Born in New Zealand, she used Maori folklore and legends to inform the background of the Torin trilogy.

Ms. Wilder’s fiction, both novel length and shorter works, ranges well beyond epic fantasy and hard science fiction to include dark fantasy, horror and the weird, as well as mysteries and thrillers. Cruel Designs is a stand-alone contemporary dark fantasy novel that evokes horror by its allusion to people and events in Nazi Germany, the consequences of whose actions cast a dark pall over the residents of a house decades later.

Her novel The Wanderer, co-written with Katya Reimann, is the first in a projected

trilogy entitled Secrets of Hylor.

Cherry Wilder lived for some years in Australia, and then for a number of years in

Germany with her husband, Horst Grimm and their two daughters, before returning in

1996 to her native New Zealand, where she lived until her death in 2002.

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Top reviews from the United States

1.0 out of 5 stars
Too bad, because the premise was good
Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2007
I picked this up and read the back and the blurbs and it sounded like it would be interesting, if not a good read. Unfortunately, this book was bad from the first paragraph on. There were so many names and characters just thrown at me, I could hardly tell when the story... See more
I picked this up and read the back and the blurbs and it sounded like it would be interesting, if not a good read. Unfortunately, this book was bad from the first paragraph on. There were so many names and characters just thrown at me, I could hardly tell when the story started to advance. The immediate establishment of the military guys bad, us civillians good, was also irritating, since neither side was able to prove themselves anything other than their labeling. I was so confused after the first sixty pages, I had to give up. The book had gone from confusing to impossible to follow. At that point, I'd already lost interest in the characters, since I could hardly tell what was going on, and could have cared less about their fates.
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2.0 out of 5 stars
Failed to Deliver
Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2005
Cherry Wilder's novel "Signs of Life" details the events surrounding the emergency landing of the crew of the Serendip Dana, a World Space Organization "transport" on it's way to Arkady. Presumably Arkady is a human planet somehow associated with the World Space... See more
Cherry Wilder's novel "Signs of Life" details the events surrounding the emergency landing of the crew of the Serendip Dana, a World Space Organization "transport" on it's way to Arkady. Presumably Arkady is a human planet somehow associated with the World Space Organization, which the reader can infer is an institution based on Earth that manages at least one "transport", the Serendip Dana. As to what exactly they were transporting we can't be entirely sure, at one point livestock are mentioned and there are a whole lot of reguler crew, silver cross members (repair crew organized along traditional military ranks), Auxiliary Support personal (andriods) and a media team accompanying a high ranking member of a popular religious movement.
EDIT: I know now that the name probably came from the "Search for Extraterrestrial Radio Emissions from Nearby Developed Intelligent Populations (SERENDIP)" project started in the seventies by the SETI organization. This adds a little more depth to the world and I thought it worth mentioning.

There, you now know everything there is to know about the Wilder's Universe outside of the planet of Rhomary. Seriously, that's it. The entire rest of the novel has to do with how the survivors interact with each other (and much later the natives) after crash landing. The survivors split into more or less two groups, the regular crew who are more or less normal and the silver cross members who being more "military" are made stereotypically disagreeable, violent and power hungry.

None of the characters change much over the course of the novel. And after the crash landing Wilder doesn't really throw any external challenges their way so you can't really blame them. It's just 300+ pages of social drama.

So why two stars instead of one? For starters I found Wilder's writing style in Signs of Life to be refreshingly different from the mainstream. Alot of times she makes the reader fill in details within the storyline that normally would need to be explained by the author. The world is kept vague enough that whatever you imagine will fit with the storyline. It was almost like I was helping her write the story, this grew tiring after a while but I enjoyed the change.

If your a Cherry Wilder fan or really enjoy reading about social dynamics in fictional environments, this book my be right for you. If you are detail oriented or believe sci-fi requires high entertainment value and should contain interesting new concepts, ideas, ways of looking at things, etc., then I would advise passing this book up.
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3.0 out of 5 stars
I missed something here...
Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 1998
"Signs of Life" is well written, but is overly dependent on a story universe I know nothing about. In addition, Wilder introduces a lot of characters. Some of these characters were rather interesting (like the androids), although most just further diluted... See more
"Signs of Life" is well written, but is overly dependent on a story universe I know nothing about.
In addition, Wilder introduces a lot of characters. Some of these characters were rather interesting (like the androids), although most just further diluted the story. I think the reader would have been better served with a simpler presentation providing more background.
If you have been following Wilder's work in other books or magazines you will probably get a lot out of this book. I've never read anything by this author. As such I was as much a castaway as the survivors of the "Serendip Dana".
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5.0 out of 5 stars
"Grin and Bear" it no more
Reviewed in the United States on April 23, 2000
Few and far between is there a required reading during my academic courses that can actively keep my attention and provoke genuine thought. This book has managed to do just that, which was initially most surprising to me. Geared for use in the classroom by writing... See more
Few and far between is there a required reading during my academic courses that can actively keep my attention and provoke genuine thought. This book has managed to do just that, which was initially most surprising to me.
Geared for use in the classroom by writing professors and students, Signs of Life offers quite a large selection of readings regarding contemporary American popular culture. Dispersed throughout these readings are thoughtful semiotic analyses of themes, products and other icons of popular culture that we as consumers and forced listeners usually don't pay much attention to. There is a strong emphasis placed on why and how modern advertisements work. Such attention to detail has caused me to recently do double takes on ads I've seen in passing, just to think about why the darn thing looks the way it does.
The authors' aims were to aid in generating atmospheres for lively class discussions, and for demystifying the sometimes terrifyingly foreign lingo, reasoning and thinking used on students by writing professors. Although this "foreign" language is usually just regarded with a sort of "grin and bear it" attitude by students abroad, it really doesn't have to be dealt with that way afterall. Amazingly, the more inviting world of non-academia and the academic world itself can be easily merged, courtesy of the insights provided by this book. I certainly think that the authors have succeeded in their goals with Signs of Life, and my writing skills have grown stronger because of it.
It's also a delightful read on all accounts, and it doesn't necessarily hold all of its appeal solely for professors and students. In hindsight, I would have read this book anyway, student or not.
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1.0 out of 5 stars
Just too awkward to read!
Reviewed in the United States on November 7, 2000
I hate people who don't explain their abbreviations. It took me thirty pages to realise that Oxper was an abbreviation for Auxuliary Personnel, and that this meant anderoids. I couldn't figure out the difference between Silvos, Silver Cross and the people wearing silver... See more
I hate people who don't explain their abbreviations. It took me thirty pages to realise that Oxper was an abbreviation for Auxuliary Personnel, and that this meant anderoids. I couldn't figure out the difference between Silvos, Silver Cross and the people wearing silver suits. I eventually figured out that Silvo was an abbreviation for Silver Cross and that they wore blue suits while the Crew, who are not silver cross, wear silver suits from time to time. Confused? Welcome to the club.
I eventually got fed up trying to work out silly little enigmas like these, I lost whatever plot there was, failed to identify with any of the characters, and so the book has been dropped, unfinished. This, from me, is a testament to a bad book. I have finished some pretty bad stuff in my day, I am a finisher, and for me not to finish, the book has to stink like a skunk in a farting contest. Peeyouw!
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