Rating: Summary: An Apt Statement of the Times Review: "Liquid Earth" reads like one of Pickover's on-line experiments in collaborative writing. It is like the Internet, itself -- a stream of collective consciousness. The book also depicts something like a human reaction to information overload, living on Moore's Law accelerating cultural curve. Living in a Fracturing Reality is like experiencing landmark buildings crashing to the ground for no good reason. The book is in fact poignantly topical. It inspires reflection.
Rating: Summary: An Apt Statement of the Times Review: "Liquid Earth" reads like one of Pickover's on-line experiments in collaborative writing. It is like the Internet, itself -- a stream of collective consciousness. The book also depicts something like a human reaction to information overload, living on Moore's Law accelerating cultural curve. Living in a Fracturing Reality is like experiencing landmark buildings crashing to the ground for no good reason. The book is in fact poignantly topical. It inspires reflection.
Rating: Summary: An Apt Statement of the Times Review: "Liquid Earth" reads like one of Pickover's on-line experiments in collaborative writing. It is like the Internet, itself -- a stream of collective consciousness. The book also depicts something like a human reaction to information overload, living on Moore's Law accelerating cultural curve. Living in a Fracturing Reality is like experiencing landmark buildings crashing to the ground for no good reason. The book is in fact poignantly topical. It inspires reflection.
Rating: Summary: A futuristic novel poised at the edges of reality Review: A futuristic novel poised at the edges of reality
Finally! The science-fiction liquid you always wanted to dive in! The plot is delicious, weird, compelling and insane - all at the same time.
Clifford Pickover's brilliant, extraordinary imagination introduces technical and emotional surprises, and forces the reader to reevaluate his or her ordinary notions of consensus reality. Hop on board, as you ready yourself to
explore strange parallel realities in a hyper-dimensional journey along a rustic, cobblestone Main Street.
Yes, the plot is dense with details and twists. You'll encounter androids with poetic souls, and a looping, fractal Romeo and Juliet tale that teeters on the edge of this world and a world to come. But the book is not simply about odd ideas. It centers on friendship, romance, and love, which are eternal.
The themes and images will haunt and uplift you. Who knows? The reality fractures in the book might just happen anytime in your own town. They might be lurking just around the corner you pass every day when going to gym, work, school or while just enjoying shopping. Be prepared. And I can assure you -- after reading Liquid Earth, you'll pay much more attention to the ordinary- looking shopping aisles at your local supermarket. Or - more precisely - you'll never look at any grocery store in the same way ever again.
Rating: Summary: Warps Your Mind Review: I have finished Liquid Earth and plan to read the other three books (that I know of) in the Pickover's Neoreality series. I haven't enjoyed a novel as much as this in a long time. The pace was brisk, the humor lively and weird, the reality distortions LSDlike. Max, a private detective, meets beautiful Mink at a fair. Chronoplasmids are threatening to destroy the rustic town of Shrub Oak, New York. Together, Max and Mink must find the source of the reality fractures before the town is destroyed. Along their journey, they meet a host of funny and frightening characters -- android poets, gharials, intelligent gibbons, data wasps... My favorite scene occurred in the hotel when Max and Mink try to fix a holodisplay that is malfunctioning in odd ways and, for some reason, likes to display a smelly Japanese fish market. I liked the various references to ethnic foods. I wasn't able to crack some of the secret codes, but I liked them in the book. My advice: buy this book! It's safer than taking LSD, and you'll laugh and have your mind stretched beyond the breaking point. The book really makes you think, and my brother's professor has selected it for discussion when school starts. Pickover has a way of getting inside your head and scrambling it. Quirky, mind-expanding, emotional, creative, fun. Dali on drugs. Pynchon lobotomized. Heinlein in hyperspace. Soar! I have just started The Lobotomy Club, another book in the Neoreality series, and find this just as fascinating. (People who like Liquid Earth will also like Heinlein's Job and Number of the Beast, and also Greg Egan's Diaspora.)
Rating: Summary: Warps Your Mind Review: I have finished Liquid Earth and plan to read the other three books (that I know of) in the Pickover's Neoreality series. I haven't enjoyed a novel as much as this in a long time. The pace was brisk, the humor lively and weird, the reality distortions LSDlike. Max, a private detective, meets beautiful Mink at a fair. Chronoplasmids are threatening to destroy the rustic town of Shrub Oak, New York. Together, Max and Mink must find the source of the reality fractures before the town is destroyed. Along their journey, they meet a host of funny and frightening characters -- android poets, gharials, intelligent gibbons, data wasps... My favorite scene occurred in the hotel when Max and Mink try to fix a holodisplay that is malfunctioning in odd ways and, for some reason, likes to display a smelly Japanese fish market. I liked the various references to ethnic foods. I wasn't able to crack some of the secret codes, but I liked them in the book. My advice: buy this book! It's safer than taking LSD, and you'll laugh and have your mind stretched beyond the breaking point. The book really makes you think, and my brother's professor has selected it for discussion when school starts. Pickover has a way of getting inside your head and scrambling it. Quirky, mind-expanding, emotional, creative, fun. Dali on drugs. Pynchon lobotomized. Heinlein in hyperspace. Soar! I have just started The Lobotomy Club, another book in the Neoreality series, and find this just as fascinating. (People who like Liquid Earth will also like Heinlein's Job and Number of the Beast, and also Greg Egan's Diaspora.)
Rating: Summary: Got halfway through, couldn't finish it Review: I thought the forward was great, and had high expectations for the book itself. However, I found it to be nearly unreadable. The author's basic storytelling skills are unfortunately non-existant. Much of the book is full of little detours that are pointless and do not add to the story. I kept waiting for something really cool to happen, and nothing did. Maybe the second half is great, but I couldn't make it.
Rating: Summary: Do Androids Dream of Kosher Knishes? Review: In Liquid Earth, advanced robots help humans deal with a reality that melts along a calm Main Street in Shrub Oak, New York. (Some of the robots are religious and seem to enjoy exotic ethnic foods.) Max, a detective, and his girlfriend Mink have to find the source of chronoplamsids that are causing reality fractures. I love some of the funny scenes with the haiku error messages, strange methods of prophecy, and android prostitutes and police. And the bizarre portrayal of God makes one think..... Has anyone been able to decrypt the strange symbolic code on page 128? In any case, buy this book so you can laugh and have your mind warped.
Rating: Summary: Do Androids Dream of Kosher Knishes? Review: In Liquid Earth, advanced robots help humans deal with a reality that melts along a calm Main Street in Shrub Oak, New York. (Some of the robots are religious and seem to enjoy exotic ethnic foods.) Max, a detective, and his girlfriend Mink have to find the source of chronoplamsids that are causing reality fractures. I love some of the funny scenes with the haiku error messages, strange methods of prophecy, and android prostitutes and police. And the bizarre portrayal of God makes one think..... Has anyone been able to decrypt the strange symbolic code on page 128? In any case, buy this book so you can laugh and have your mind warped.
Rating: Summary: Wow -- what a ride... Review: Like drinking a Big Gulp too fast, this book will give you brain freeze -- but in a good way! It begins with a strange encounter and never looks back. Cliff Pickover weaves an interesting story centered on shifting reality (Does anybody really know what time it is? Does anybody really care?) caused by a growing space-time rupture. Bring along a cat, a heroine, and robot, and you have quite a crew. Like Pickover's non-fiction books, there is plenty of science and other stuff to learn here, only this time wrapped up in an often hilarious, very entertaining sci-fi story. I enjoyed it and look forward to reading other stories in the Neoreality Series...
|