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Rating: Summary: A Classic SF Series Review: A must-read series for all science fiction fans, the Sector General novels have been described as a cross between Star Trek and ER. I began reading these books as a kid and I still love reading them today. They are great examples of what multiculturalism and interracial tolerance are supposed to be! One of my favorite characters is Prilicla the tiny insectoid empath, always having to dodge the huge aliens around her, both physically and emotionally. There are over a dozen books in the series, many of them out of print, but they are worth your time if you can find them all.
Rating: Summary: A Classic SF Series Review: A must-read series for all science fiction fans, the Sector General novels have been described as a cross between Star Trek and ER. I began reading these books as a kid and I still love reading them today. They are great examples of what multiculturalism and interracial tolerance are supposed to be! One of my favorite characters is Prilicla the tiny insectoid empath, always having to dodge the huge aliens around her, both physically and emotionally. There are over a dozen books in the series, many of them out of print, but they are worth your time if you can find them all.
Rating: Summary: What a Launching! Review: General: "Hospital Station" is actually a collection of short stories that inaugurated or launched a series of novels by James White about a huge, inter-species hospital space station called Sector General. Sector General is staffed by a variety of different intelligent species, including humans, and treats the hardest cases from all over the galaxy. White seems to delight in generating as varied a population as possible for this ship, and gives great detail about the different physical forms seen in the staff, along with their eating habits, social habits, mating habits (in a very PG, if not G-rated way), and cultural beliefs.Specific: In one story, an intelligent but brawny construction worker, O'Mara, gets stuck nursing an injured and orphaned alien baby back to health, as Sector General is under construction. He thereby heals the hospitals first patient, and begins his climb to the position of Chief Psychologist (and unofficial Personnel Manager) of Sector General. The other stories deal with Conway, who starts off by being a naive but up-and-coming young doctor who assists a visiting physician in helping an alien brontosaurus learn teleportation and thereby survive an upcoming ice age on its home planet; he tracks down a juvenile shape-changer who is frantically running amok in the hospital; he (eventually) correctly diagnoses a member of a new-found alien species as not having lethal cancer but instead . . well, I won't give that ending away. Technical: James Whites writes with great pace, simple dialogue, good character development, and frequent light humor, while tackling fairly complex plots and issues. While "Hospital Station" is not the best in the series (I would give that honorific to "The Genocidal Healer"), it is a great introduction to a very enjoyable series of books that spanned several decades.
Rating: Summary: What a Launching! Review: General: "Hospital Station" is actually a collection of short stories that inaugurated or launched a series of novels by James White about a huge, inter-species hospital space station called Sector General. Sector General is staffed by a variety of different intelligent species, including humans, and treats the hardest cases from all over the galaxy. White seems to delight in generating as varied a population as possible for this ship, and gives great detail about the different physical forms seen in the staff, along with their eating habits, social habits, mating habits (in a very PG, if not G-rated way), and cultural beliefs. Specific: In one story, an intelligent but brawny construction worker, O'Mara, gets stuck nursing an injured and orphaned alien baby back to health, as Sector General is under construction. He thereby heals the hospitals first patient, and begins his climb to the position of Chief Psychologist (and unofficial Personnel Manager) of Sector General. The other stories deal with Conway, who starts off by being a naive but up-and-coming young doctor who assists a visiting physician in helping an alien brontosaurus learn teleportation and thereby survive an upcoming ice age on its home planet; he tracks down a juvenile shape-changer who is frantically running amok in the hospital; he (eventually) correctly diagnoses a member of a new-found alien species as not having lethal cancer but instead . . well, I won't give that ending away. Technical: James Whites writes with great pace, simple dialogue, good character development, and frequent light humor, while tackling fairly complex plots and issues. While "Hospital Station" is not the best in the series (I would give that honorific to "The Genocidal Healer"), it is a great introduction to a very enjoyable series of books that spanned several decades.
Rating: Summary: What a Launching! Review: General: "Hospital Station" is actually a collection of short stories that inaugurated or launched a series of novels by James White about a huge, inter-species hospital space station called Sector General. Sector General is staffed by a variety of different intelligent species, including humans, and treats the hardest cases from all over the galaxy. White seems to delight in generating as varied a population as possible for this ship, and gives great detail about the different physical forms seen in the staff, along with their eating habits, social habits, mating habits (in a very PG, if not G-rated way), and cultural beliefs. Specific: In one story, an intelligent but brawny construction worker, O'Mara, gets stuck nursing an injured and orphaned alien baby back to health, as Sector General is under construction. He thereby heals the hospitals first patient, and begins his climb to the position of Chief Psychologist (and unofficial Personnel Manager) of Sector General. The other stories deal with Conway, who starts off by being a naive but up-and-coming young doctor who assists a visiting physician in helping an alien brontosaurus learn teleportation and thereby survive an upcoming ice age on its home planet; he tracks down a juvenile shape-changer who is frantically running amok in the hospital; he (eventually) correctly diagnoses a member of a new-found alien species as not having lethal cancer but instead . . well, I won't give that ending away. Technical: James Whites writes with great pace, simple dialogue, good character development, and frequent light humor, while tackling fairly complex plots and issues. While "Hospital Station" is not the best in the series (I would give that honorific to "The Genocidal Healer"), it is a great introduction to a very enjoyable series of books that spanned several decades.
Rating: Summary: must have for hard scifi readers Review: Just imagine how a first class space hospital must be, hundreds of different ambiental conditions, aliens and sickness. The doctors must be creative, intelligent and corageous, to treat unknow species in conditions were nothing is what it seems, tear your patient into pieces to safe its life, try to run trough corridors of chlorine, high gravity , water, to safe a life, or try to convince your simbiotic assistant that your are doing the best treatment, when he can easily crush you. Be prepared for the most inmersive sci fi novel you have read.
Rating: Summary: must have for hard scifi readers Review: Just imagine how a first class space hospital must be, hundreds of different ambiental conditions, aliens and sickness. The doctors must be creative, intelligent and corageous, to treat unknow species in conditions were nothing is what it seems, tear your patient into pieces to safe its life, try to run trough corridors of chlorine, high gravity , water, to safe a life, or try to convince your simbiotic assistant that your are doing the best treatment, when he can easily crush you. Be prepared for the most inmersive sci fi novel you have read.
Rating: Summary: First Book Of A Fine Series Review: The 'Hospital Station' of the title is Sector Twelve General Hospital, a multi-species, multi-enviroment hive that hangs "like a misshappen christmas tree" far out on the Galactic Rim. Originally a series of short stories the first, Medic, is a sort of prologue set during the Hospital Station's construction. In it a surly construction worker named O'Mara finds himself treating the Hospital's very first patient. 'Sector General' introduces Dr. Conway, a young, idealistic and rather naive junior physician who has a lot to learn about how the Galactic Federation and the Hospital really function. In 'The Trouble With Emily' Conway is assigned to assist a visiting VIP, Dr. Arretapec, a "levitating ball of goo" with advanced psi powers who refuses to tell Conway exactly what he is trying to accomplish with their 'patient' a perfectly healthy brontosaurian being - nicknamed Emily. In 'Visitor At Large' Conway is in charge of a pediatrics ward and has an assistant of his own; a frail, spiderlike, empathic sensitive called Prilicla. In another ward an exotic being, capable of changing form at will, is dying of an undiagnosed, untreatable condition. The usual rule against visitors is relaxed to allow the entity's child to make a farewell visit to its parent. Unfortunately the welcoming committee of strange looking aliens, including Conway and Prilicla, frightens the youngster into headlong flight. A terrified, immature being, capable of assuming any shape, lost in the multiple levels of Sector General, unable to communicate and worst of all - getting hungry... In 'Out Patient' Conway is promoted to Senior Physician and presented with a new patient; a being of unknown race that is apparently being eaten alive by some kind of cancerous growth.
Rating: Summary: 1st volume of the series: 5 short stories Review: The earlier volumes of the series were collections of stories written for magazines, but as the publishing world altered over time, the emphasis changed to full-length novels. A new reader can begin at any point, since White is careful to fill in the background, often via an explanation delivered to a new trainee, visitor, or Monitor Corps pilot. This book is part of the omnibus edition _Beginning Operations_. "Medic" - One of the earliest entries in the series in terms of internal chronology; *the* earliest is the first story in the collection _Sector General_, describing how the hospital came to be founded, while this story relates how O'Mara, a member of the hospital's original construction crew, wound up looking after the hospital's first patient. In later years, O'Mara sealed the file on this story, but couldn't completely hush it up no matter how hard he tried. :) If you're curious about how O'Mara evolved into the gruff personality we know best, read _Mind Changer_. "Sector General" - Not to be confused with the short story collection of the same name, which is in the omnibus edition _Alien Emergencies_. Conway makes his first appearance as the viewpoint character, a position he occupied until the conclusion of _Star Healer_. He's only been at Sector General for 2 months, and as an ardent pacifist deeply resents the Monitor Corps, when in an emergency he gets his first dose of an Educator tape, and the resulting problems land him his first real meeting with Chief Psychologist O'Mara. Then his first ship rescue assignment confronts him with a fear-maddened entity, who (having killed Carmody, the gentle Padre of the psychology department) brings Conway face-to-face with a kill-or-be-killed situation. (See _The Genocidal Healer_ for further discussion of Carmody's role in the psychology department.) "Trouble with Emily" - Dr. Arratepec, distinguished member of a newly discovered telepathic species, has convinced its people and the Galactic Federation government to give all assistance to a classified project involving a brontosaur-like creature that its human handlers have nicknamed Emily. (Yes, it's a very bad pun.) Emily's species is facing extinction on a planet without intelligent life, although Emily itself is healthy. What is Arratepec up to, and how can Conway assist when Arratepec won't confide in him? (Incidentally, the I-have-no-time-for-women attitude disappeared rapidly when Conway met nurse, later Pathologist, Murchison.) "Visitor at Large" - Marks the first appearance of Prilicla as Conway's brand-new assistant. The visitor in question is a giant amoeba, who (as the youngest offspring of Sector General's most troublesome patient) is being allowed a deathbed visit. The patient has nothing organically wrong with it, but is quietly dissolving into water, apparently due to some psychological problem that the doctors simply can't treat. Then the hospital rapidly acquires a second problem, as the young visitor panics at the sight of all the aliens and takes flight into the depths of the hospital. "Outpatient" - Marked by Conway's promotion to Senior Physician and subsequent assumption of one or two permanent Educator tapes. (Diagnosticians aren't the only physicians to permanently carry tapes; they're distinguished by the *quantity* of permanent alter egos they carry.) The outpatient case is the sole survivor of an alien ambulance ship, of a previously unknown species (seen later in the series as the Ians). Conway's inexplicable course of treatment, which he refuses to justify until the end of the story, lands him in serious hot water in this one. Incidentally, when O'Mara remarks that despite Conway's promotion, he wouldn't trust him with his appendix, the fact emerges that O'Mara's appendix was saved by the surgeon who took it out, and now (pickled) serves as a hospital chess trophy. :) IRRELEVANT NOTE: The old Ballantine DelRey paperback edition's cover art consisted of a view of Emily during the more successful phase of Arratepec's experiments, with Conway as a small figure in the foreground.
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