Watt, Peter

Blindsight
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Excellent, paranoid, bleak view of First Contact with a stealth serving of philosophy
  • Interesting premise and ideas, but not a "MUST READ" novel!
  • Messy. Fun concepts poorly conveyed.
  • Moby Dick, or The First Contact
  • a unique blending of hard sci fi and fantasy
Blindsight
Peter Watts
Manufacturer: Tor Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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ASIN: 0765312182
Release Date: 2006-10-03

Book Description

Two months since the stars fell....Two months since sixty-five thousand alien objects clenched around the Earth like a luminous fist, screaming to the heavens as the atmosphere burned them to ash. Two months since that moment of brief, bright surveillance by agents unknown. Two months of silence, while a world holds its breath.Now some half-derelict space probe, sparking fitfully past Neptune's orbit, hears a whisper from the edge of the solar system: a faint signal sweeping the cosmos like a lighthouse beam. Whatever's out there isn't talking to us. It's talking to some distant star, perhaps. Or perhaps to something closer, something en route.So who do you send to force introductions on an intelligence with motives unknown, maybe unknowable? Who do you send to meet the alien when the alien doesn't want to meet?You send a linguist with multiple personalities, her brain surgically partitioned into separate, sentient processing cores. You send a biologist so radically interfaced with machinery that he sees x-rays and tastes ultrasound, so compromised by grafts and splices he no longer feels his own flesh. You send a pacifist warrior in the faint hope she won't be needed, and the fainter one she'll do any good if she is. You send a monster to command them all, an extinct hominid predator once called vampire, recalled from the grave with the voodoo of recombinant genetics and the blood of sociopaths. And you send a synthesistan informational topologist with half his mind gone-as an interface between here and there, a conduit through which the Dead Center might hope to understand the Bleeding Edge.You send them all to the edge of interstellar space, praying you can trust such freaks and retrofits with the fate of a world. You fear they may be more alien than the thing they've been sent to find.But you'd give anything for that to be true, if you only knew what was waiting for them....

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Excellent, paranoid, bleak view of First Contact with a stealth serving of philosophy.......2007-06-15

Blindsight is a wonderful, thought-stimulating and extremely inventive look at a possible first contact scenario. It also deals with the nature of alienness and intelligence. It succeeds very well at staying within the constraints of relatively near-future, plausible science, i.e. hard scifi. But not just hard scifi for the sake, of it. Blindsight really challenges you to think about ways to approach a first contact situation and the incredible scope for finding life that really, really has very little in common with humanity. It uses cyberpunk themes, but does not let them take over the plot by any means.

It is also refreshingly well-written, showing a enviable command of the English language and its imagery. Here's my favorite quote:

"Then she'd (the ship) skidded north like a startled cat and started climbing: a wild high three-g burn off the ecliptic, thirteen hundred tonnes of momentum bucking against Newton's first." Granted, it doesn't make a whole lot of sense as written as Newton's first is also known as the law of inertia, but it sure sounds nice and a tweak would make it scientifically correct as well.

There are some minor shortcomings. Sometimes, the characters exchange information about things that they have understood, but the reader is not always clued in very well. Especially as this is a dense book with lots of ideas, there are parts of the book that I didn't understand and won't until I reread it. Some of this is done on purpose, but some just assumes that readers smarter than myself will pick it up.

Reading this book really restored my faith in SF, which had been ebbing a bit after too many mediocre books recently.

Last, and least - the vampires. I think that the point was to find a commander who would be a textbook psychopath as Watts likes oddball characters. As a biologist, he jokingly constructed a somewhat credible justification for vampires, if not their resurrection. Funnily enough, this backstory made me think back of primate research where monkeys have been shown to have an innate fear of snakes on video, despite never having seen a snake before. For those readers who trash the book just on the basis of having included those sadly overused beasties (as a minor facet at most) - get over it and stop being so dogmatic. If this isn't hard SF, despite those vamps, then I wonder what is.

***minor spoiler***
The humans are really outmatched by the aliens and their equalization strategy will come as no great surprise to people who follow current events.

3 out of 5 stars Interesting premise and ideas, but not a "MUST READ" novel!.......2007-06-15

I wanted to like this novel. The author explores the nature of consciousness and puts a new twist on "first contact". But, the storytelling was spotty. Normally, I would have been riveted by this type of novel and forgiving of minor flaws. However, I was never pulled into this novel. There was no empathy built with any of the characters. Personally, I found the whole "vampire" premise to be distracting and, quite frankly, silly. Also, I didn't buy the internal logic that took the reader from point A, to point B to point C in this novel. I can't be more specific without writing a spoiler review. I found the author's logic and writing hard to follow. I don't think his concepts of brain function and neuroscience would track closely with mainstream thought in the field, although he has referenced and consulted with people educated in the field. Not Hugo caliber in my opinion. Admittedly, I may have been more critical of this novel BECAUSE it was a Hugo Nominee, since my expectations were higher.

2 out of 5 stars Messy. Fun concepts poorly conveyed........2007-06-02

This vampire thing, really. I felt this was a flaw in the very design of the book - pushing the concept way too far. The way the author has to tie himself in knots explaining the history and background - why they died (actually why -did- they die) and why they were resurrected - is just clumsy artifice.

So let's just throw away the whole vampire thing and what are we left with?
A fairly good read actually. Quite a page turner (very fast page-turning wherever vampire explanations pop up).

The main character seems to reflect an author who has real difficulties in his life connecting with other people and maintaining relationships. Supposedly the protagonist is more human at the end of the book, but apart from a couple of cryptic admissions of past failure and insights into their cause, it's hard to tell any difference in his humanity compared to the start of the book. Might as well have turned the pages faster I guess.

Similarly some sequences where people and space objects are moving about, the author uses a foot-wide paintbrush where a fine pencil would be better. You cannot tell what picture the author is trying to draw in your mind.
Given the title (Blindsight) he might be trying to make the point that feelings are more explicative than visual clarity, and that the feeling of foreboding malevolence is the result he is trying to achieve. But the fear of the unknown cannot be induced by confusing the reader.

Some passages are excruciatingly detailed listings of what is probably serious science, but he really doesn't have to list, for example, all 30 chemical compounds of an alien atmosphere. It is quite sufficient to say "the atmosphere was a toxic chemical soup, which would burn your skin off in seconds". I suppose it is meant to impress, but to me they are just sequences of sentences that say "blah".

At the end of the book is a laughable section called Notes and References. It's as if he got so much grief from the publisher he felt compelled to add this section to explain himself. A bazillion references does not a good sf read make. For example one page (374) has 5 lines of text and 21 references. Twenty-one!

He loses one star for vampires, loses one star for confusing action sequences, loses one star for failing to make the Notes and References irrelevant.
He keeps one star for interesting concepts, and one star because it is a fun, quick read (excluding, obviously, the Notes and References).

Could do better.

4 out of 5 stars Moby Dick, or The First Contact .......2007-05-18

"Blindsight" is an excellent science fiction novel about the difficulties humans would have in understanding aliens who are grossly different from us, and as much about how this can show us how little we understand ourselves and each other. The humans spaceship crew are extremes of their types: the leader is homo sapiens vampiris, a genetically reconstructed vampire, sociopath and intense predator who requires a fair bit of suspension of disbelief; the linguist has four full personalities; thefnarrator had half his brain removed in childhood, and brilliantly perceives what others really think and feel, but without any real empathy, and so on. This sounds somewhat overdone, but works well, in the context of trying to figure out the giant alien creature growing in space and its smaller lifeforms, apparently intelligent but not conscious, as discussed by the human crew, complete with scientific references, many of them real.
Aside from the theories about human and alien minds, the story is also a tragedy about an increasingly hopeless quest by the crew of a doomed ship run by a frightening predator who will stop at nothing to succeed against a giant, threatening creature. This sounds like the situation in "Moby Dick," and indeed the narrator alone survives, with a hibernation "coffin."
Recommended for those who enjoy both science fiction and thinking about minds.

5 out of 5 stars a unique blending of hard sci fi and fantasy.......2007-05-18

Blindsight is a unique and extremely clever novel, and Watts' greatest accomplishment here is to create an offbeat cast of oddballs with mystical powers and fantastic features that is nevertheless thoroughly grounded in a plausible story of the science that would make these characters and their tools possible. There are vampires (recovered Jurassic-park style from an early humanoid ancestor with regenerative powers and a tendency to go into epileptic fits at the sight of hard right angles), a brilliant linguist inhabited by fully functional and unique multiple personalities (ghosts as it were), cyborg doctors (magicians with healing powers as it were), and a storytelling savant (who, though lacking in real human emotions, understands them and can translate the complexities of this new world into a dispassionate prose). All of these have explanations, and one clever device is to have the narrator be a synthesist who can provide such explanations -- whose brain is split into human and machine components and whose job is to give a summary of what computers and other genetically modified geniuses are thinking and doing to the less advanced ordinary folks back home (like us).

So, we have a cast of brilliant misfits sent into deep space to sort out the intentions of an alien intelligence that has sent an array of mysterious probes to study the Earth. First contact, though, turns out not to be what had been expected. One of the most intriguing elements of the book is to explore the possibility of intelligence without consciousness (for which the phenomenon of "blindsight" serves as an apt metaphor) and to consider what such an intelligence would make of us. In this aspect of the book, Watts is obviously informed by contemporary debates among philosophers and cognitive scientists about such issue, even having his characters refer directly to philosophers like Hubert Dreyfus, computer theorists like Alan Turing, and biologists like Richard Dawkins. (While this aspect can be seen to "date" the book by tying it to discussions of the last forty years or so -- will anyone remember Dawkins or Dreyfus fifty or a hundred years from now? -- still it makes an intriguing entry into this debate and illustrates what is at stake in the debate between "eliminativists" about consciousness and "property dualists").

There's a lot going on here, and one worry is that to some degree the interest of the story gets lost in the details of the future world, its politics and economics and religion, the former "love life" of the narrator, the mechanics of space flight, the philosophical questions surrounding consciousness, etc. Still, these aspects are woven together in intriguing and compelling ways -- as, for example, the question of our narrator's emotional life prepares us for the bigger issues of the importance of awareness (over and above intelligent adaptive behavior. While it is often more "cerebral" than "visceral" it is nevertheless a gripping read, that plays intelligently with a number of ideas, and at the same time gives us some of the fascination and fun that you can get in fantasy with a band of mysterious and powerful freaks on an impossible mission.
Maelstrom (Rifters Trilogy)
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Fantastic sequel to _Starfish_
  • Everything that Wm Gibson was supposed to be....
  • Disappointing Sequel
  • An Intriguing Novel from One of Canada's New SF Writers
  • Dark, gritty fiction
Maelstrom (Rifters Trilogy)
Peter Watts
Manufacturer: Tor Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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ASIN: 0312878060

Book Description

An enormous tidal wave on the West Coast of North America has just killed thousands. Lenie Clarke, in a black wetsuit, walks out of the ocean onto a Pacific Northwest beach filled with the oppressed and drugged homeless of the Asian world who have gotten only this far in their attempt to reach America. Is she a monster or a goddess? One thing is for sure: all hell is breaking loose. This dark, fast-paced, hard SF novel returns to the story begun in Starfish: all human life is threatened by a disease (actually a primeval form of life) from the distant prehuman past. It survived only in the deep ocean rift where Clarke and her companions were stationed before the corporation that employed them tried to sterilize the threat with a secret underwater nuclear strike. But Clarke was far enough away that she was able to survive and tough enough to walk home, three hundred miles across the ocean floor. She arrives carrying with her the potential death of the human race, and possessed by a desire for revenge. Maelstrom is a terrifying explosion of cyberpunk noir by a writer whose narrative, says Robert Sheckley, "drives like a futuristic locomotive."AUTHORBIO: Peter Watts lives in Toronto, Ontario.

Download Description

This is a dark, fast-paced, hard SF novel that returns to the story set up in Starfish: all human life is threatened by a disease (actually an early form of life) from the distant prehuman past. It survived in the deep ocean rift where Lenie Clarke and her companions were stationed before the corporation that employed them tried to sterilize the threat with a secret tactical nuclear strike. But Clarke was far enough away that she was able to survive and walk home, 300 miles underwater. As this book opens, Clarke walks onto shore, carrying the potential death of the human race, and possessed by a desire for revenge.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Fantastic sequel to _Starfish_.......2007-06-04

Peter Watts' _Starfish_ introduced the reader to a fascinating, very well-developed dystopian world, the sometimes wonderful but often frightening world of the mid-21st century. In _Maelstrom_, Watts shows how that world comes to an end.

_Maelstrom_ begins right where _Starfish_ left off. Lenie Clarke and Ken Lubin, "rifters," people modified to work at a deep sea power-generating station (practically cyborgs in some respects), are the sole survivors of an attempt to contain the deadly pathogen dubbed Behemoth, discovered at the deep sea geothermal vent where Bebee Station was located. As the reader learned in _Starfish_, the strange and extremely deadly microorganism lived at that particular vent and was isolated until humans set up shop in its habitat. Aware of the unbelievable risks posed by the microbe, the government of North America used nuclear weapons to destroy the potentially biosphere-ending benthic organism at the end of _Starfish_, hoping to destroy the vent, the station, the rifters, and anything remotely associated with Behemoth. The resulting tsunami and earthquakes - made worse by the very nature of the smart gels assigned to handle the Behemoth problem - killed millions.

Unfortunately, Behemoth was not contained. Not only had it already spread to the North American Pacific coast, it was being carried further inland by Lenie Clark. Quite angry at the betrayals and lies she had been subject to, she journeyed inland to seek answers and revenge of a sort, unfortunately sowing the seeds for North America's if not the world's demise. Wherever she went, she spread Behemoth.

Lenie Clarke became far more successful than she had any right to be, owing to an unusual concentration of forces and alignment of events in her favor, as Clarke became not only a societal force but also a force of sorts in Maelstrom, the whirling, chaotic, violent successor to the modern internet, a place dominated by increasingly intelligent and dangerous "wildlife," rogue computer programs, future descendents of today's computer viruses but much more troublesome. The author's description of the evolution of such electronic organisms and the conditions prevalent in Maelstrom in the mid 21st century were fascinating and chilling. It made me very concerned about my virus protection software on my computer (not that any modern program could hope to prevail against the monsters of Maelstrom)!

Other major players include two members of the "Entropy Patrol," two "'lawbreakers" by the name of Achilles Desjardins and Alice Jovellanos. Given enormous power to react quickly, ruthlessly, and efficiently to mounting global crises, they are information experts, able to interpret, analyze, and quickly act on mounds of data in any field, be it economics, ecology, disaster management, or any other sphere (aided by the fact that they were given incredibly enhanced intellectual reflexes and pattern-matching skills). At first the Entropy Patrol was designed to act quickly and globally in an era of quarantines, diebacks, and crop failures, acting to quickly contain diseases and invasive organisms as they spread over the world as to well as to contend with other things such as global terrorism, they increasingly came to include in their sphere other sources of concern, with the power to instantly ruin millions of lives economically or to even physically end lives with powerful weapons (as long as it served the greater good of course). More powerful than any despot or emperor ever dreamed of being, only one thing stood to keep them in check, a biochemical fix known as Guilt Trip, which prevented `lawbreakers from acting against the greater good. Derived from chemicals used by parasites to control the behavior of their host, Guilt Trip paralyzed anyone with guilt - literally paralyzing them - if they ever sought to do something against the greater good. Guilt Trip was the only way anyone would ever sleep soundly knowing people like Desjardins had such enormous power at their fingertips.

Other players included Sou-Hon Perreault, a botfly operator (botflies are remotely operated flying machines, able to hover or speed to trouble spots and bring to bear as needed a battery of sensors, instruments, and in some cases weapons) and Patricia Rowan as well (a "corpse" - or corporate executive - from the first novel).

An interesting and well-written book, it was a little dark at times though generally never truly disturbing. You can see the large amount of research the author has put into this novel (but not to such an extent that the action drags or characters come off as flat or anything).

5 out of 5 stars Everything that Wm Gibson was supposed to be...........2005-09-19

I finished Maelstrom over the weekend. In case you didnt' know, its the sequel to Starfish and number 2 of 4 in the Rifters series. The third and fourth parts are two halves of one book that have been published separately because together it was more than 110,000 words, an obscure number in publishing that means the book can't make enough to be worth publishing alone.

Starfish was one of the more imaginative sciece fiction novels that I've ever read. If you remember the hype that surrounded William Gibson when he wrote Mona Lisa Overdrive, you might also remember how disappointing those books were. More about style than substance. Peter Watts delivers both style and substance in an elegant and beautiful writing style. His books are HARD sci fi. You'll have to pay attention but its very much worth the trip. Watts delivers what Gibson was supposed to...in spades.

Starfish was about adapted humans living in the deep sea vents, mining geologic heat to convert into energy for the world above the waters. They have been modified to be able to live underwater (I want to be one!) and they're psychotic.

Maelstrom picks right up where Starfish ended and turned up the dial about a thousand percent. Wow. What an amazing read!

If you like science fiction, you'll love these books. They are the gold nuggets that we will read a thousand books to try to find. Save yourself the nine hundred ninety nine books and go get this one.

Five stars, which I'm not sure I've ever given before.

2 out of 5 stars Disappointing Sequel.......2004-01-14

I bought this sequel to Starfish, and to be frank, was disap-
pointed. Narration seemed disjointed, couldn't follow it very
well-may have been too cyber-punk for my tastes. I ended up skipping to the very end to read the conclusion, and it still
disappointed me. I don't think I'll keep it, either, that's how
disappointing it was to me. Too many disaparate strings of the
story just did not seem to be resolved in a satisfying way. Too
cool and too hip a story for me. Needed better editing, perhaps
not enough resolution to keep me interested very much.

4 out of 5 stars An Intriguing Novel from One of Canada's New SF Writers.......2002-10-05

I inadvertently picked up "Maelstrom" at a local library recently and found it hard to put down. Peter Watts is a splendid, hard science fiction writer whose technological descriptions rival many I've seen from the likes of Gregory Benford and Greg Bear, among others. Unfortunately, his characters are not nearly as well fleshed out as theirs, often resembling one dimensional figures whose existence merely serves to advance the plot. Nor is his writing as lyrical as theirs, which I found rather surprising since one of his acquaintances is Canada's best young writer of science fiction, Nalo Hopkinson. Yet fans of technological science fiction will undoubtedly find "Maelstrom" quite intriguing, even if it only resembles in tone and substance, genuine cyberpunk fiction.

5 out of 5 stars Dark, gritty fiction.......2002-02-19

First off, if you haven't read Peter Watts' first novel, "Starfish", don't start with "Maelstrom". While this is theoretically a stand-alone novel, the reader unfamiliar with "Starfish" will miss out on a tremendous amount of back-story and character development. ...

As for "Maelstrom" itself, Watts has easily cleared the high bar he set with his first novel. All too often, sequels are rehashes of old conflict, but that is not the case here at all. Watts takes his already complex characters from the first novel and adds several more layers of texture; at the same time he adds just enough new characters to keep things interesting. These characters are equally well developed, and overall, Watts' writing is even sharper than in the first book.

The writing has to be sharper, because this is a much more complicated novel than the first. While "Starfish" took place in the relatively limited space of a deep ocean outpost, and dealt primarily with human interactions, "Maelstrom" sprawls across the Pacific and North America and a significant portion of the action takes place in cyberspace. Moreover, the plot is significantly more complicated. I don't want to get into it in too much detail, as doing so would ruin much of "Starfish" for those who haven't read it. But the general theme of this novel, like its predecessor, is the impact that the unforeseen consequences of exponentially growing technology can have on humans as a species and on the planet as a whole. In a dystopian setting of environmental havoc and human violence, two new scourges have emerged. One is spawned by nature, the other, inadvertently, by man. The result is a bizarre, but believable synergy that threatens the entire biosphere. It was particularly interesting how Watts explored the nature of consciousness by subtly comparing the burgeoning life of a piece of code with the flawed memories of the main character.

By now you may have guessed that there is a lot of science in this novel, and you'd be right. There is a great deal that is cutting edge, and even more that is purely speculative. Watts makes use of some pretty heavy biology and AI science that may intimidate readers at first blush. It would be a mistake to avoid this novel for that reason because the science is just there to set the stage for the story. If you understand the detail of it, it definitely adds many intriguing twists; but if you only understand it at the surface level, you could still easily follow the story. That's the beauty of Watts as a writer: he's pigeon hold as hard-SF, but the SF is just a means to the end of writing incredibly complex, beautiful characters struggling with problems we can easily empathize with. Finally, Watts has included an appendix discussing the key science in some detail, and also provides a bibliography of sources he used.

"Maelstrom" is an outstanding novel set in a believable, terrifying future. It was undeniably entertaining and I tore through it at a breathless pace. It also left me thinking about technology and its impacts in some new ways. Watts is no technophobe, but he makes a strong point about the lack of responsibility in many arenas of scientific endeavor. "Maelstrom" is a must read for anyone who enjoys a great story, rich characters and a thoughtful message.
Starfish (Rifters Trilogy)
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Great Hard Science Fiction
  • First-rate science fiction novel, definitely among the best I have ever read
  • Science fiction with good characters
  • So atmospheric, so dark, so good
  • Fascinating.....
Starfish (Rifters Trilogy)
Peter Watts
Manufacturer: Tor Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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  1. Behemoth: B-Max
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  3. Blindsight
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  5. The Last Colony

ASIN: 0312868553

Amazon.com

Peter Watts's first novel explores the last mysterious place on earth--the floor of a deep sea rift. Channer Vent is a zone of freezing darkness that belongs to shellfish the size of boulders and crimson worms three meters long. It's the temporary home of the maintenance crew of a geothermal energy plant--a crew made up of the damaged and dysfunctional flotsam of an overpopulated near-future earth. The crew's reluctant leader, basket case Lenie Clarke, can barely survive in the upper world, but she quickly falls under the rift's spell, just as Watts's magical descriptions of it enchant the reader: "Steam never gets a chance to form at three hundred atmospheres, but thermal distortion turns the water into a column of writhing liquid prisms, hotter than molten glass."

Watts is investigating monsters. Gigantic deep sea monsters, surgically-altered-from-human monsters, faceless jellied-brain computer monsters--which monsters are human, which are more than human, which are less? Watts keeps the story line stripped down to showcase the theme of dehumanization. The anonymous millions who live along the unstable shore of N'AmPac come under threat (a triggered earthquake, and perhaps a disaster that's slower but even more pitiless) from their own dehumanized creations. But Watts is less interested in whether Lenie can save the dry world as in whether she can save herself. In Starfish, Watts stretches the boundaries of humanity up, down, and sideways to see whether its dimensions reveal anything we'd be proud to be a part of. --Blaise Selby

Book Description

Peter Watts is a new science fiction novelist of extraordinary talent. His first stories appeared in Canadian SF magazines in the last few years and now he delivers a powerful and original novel of the not-too-distant future and the exploitation of the geothermal resources of the deep Juan de Fuca Rift in the bottom of the Pacific Ocean by multinational corporations. Unfortunately all the volunteers who are surgically altered for employment at the bottom of the ocean in these experimental stations are psychotic. And one of the central questions is how many of them can survive, or will be allowed to survive, long enough to become sane, while worldwide disaster approaches from below.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great Hard Science Fiction.......2007-04-23

Peter Watts takes his reader to the depths of the ocean and the very edge of the human psche. This hard science fiction book is the first in what was to be a trilogy, but turned out as one of a four part series. Watts brings the reader a fast paced and intrguing look at the future of mankind which as the reader finds hinges on the past of all life on this blue dot. I would highly recommend this book to any science fiction fan. In fact, I have just ordered the other three books in the series.

5 out of 5 stars First-rate science fiction novel, definitely among the best I have ever read.......2007-04-16

_Starfish_ by Peter Watts is one of the finest hard science fiction books I have ever read. It had many elements of what make a great science fiction novel. It extrapolated an interesting and believable though often surprising future, the science was realistic and well-explained (and in this book was discussed at some length in a final chapter on references) yet the author didn't forget that the book was a novel, not a science textbook, many disparate elements were woven together to form a great story (in this case deepwater biology, plate tectonics, microbiology, artificial intelligence, and psychological trauma), the characters were interesting and well-developed, and the book had that rare quality of making you feel very smart, of allowing you to piece together shocking and developing story elements, the author allowing you to form conclusions, neither watering down something nor going over the reader's head with too much jargon or hard to grasp story logic. Hard to believe that this is the author's first novel! Many science fiction authors don't do nearly as well after years in their profession.

I don't want to say too much about the book's plot as I wouldn't want to spoil it for the prospective reader. I will say that the plot's main setting is unusual and interesting and what originally attracted me to the book; a deep sea geothermal power station on the seafloor of the Pacific Ocean (specifically, Beebe Station, located near the Juan de Fuca Ridge hydrothermal vents). The station is populated by a bio-engineered crew dubbed "rifters," people who had been altered physically and mechanically to able to live and work in such an incredible harsh environment, a realm of crushing pressure, arctic-temperature waters (except around the scalding vents), and alien darkness. The type of people able to live in such an environment is a key plot point of the book and makes for some very unusual and memorable characters.

Though Beebe Station and the rifters are dominant in the book, they are not the only story elements. Other notable characters are Patricia Rowan (a CEO of the Grid Authority or GA, which owns Beebe Station and employs the rifters) and Yves Scanlon (a psychologist who works for the GA), characters which become important later in the novel as events come to entangle the rifters in a mysterious and mounting catastrophe.

I will say the novel has a climatic ending and a sequel was clearly meant from the beginning as there were several loose ends. I am currently reading that very sequel, _Maelstrom_, and find it thus far a worthy follow-up, beginning right where the action left off and exploring further Watt's detailed and interesting (if scary) world.

5 out of 5 stars Science fiction with good characters.......2007-02-16

This is the best "science fiction" book I have read in a long time. As a female reader, I tire of "Spaceman Spiff" stories and have leaned more toward fantasy. _Starfish_ is set in the deepest ocean, an environment as hostile as outer space. The time and place are earth in the near future, seen through a pessimistic lens. There's environmental problems, population problems, corporations have taken over everything, etc. These ideas are not original, nor are they really what the book is about.

_Starfish_'s main character is Lenie Clarke, a courageous woman with a troubled past. She arrives at the underwater outpost Beebe Station, not because it was her life's ambition, but because she has exhausted her other options. Lenie is a complex and extremely well-drawn character. The author did an excellent job creating a character that the reader doesn't identify with, but still develops a great affection for.

As her teammates join her at the station, they each explore their new environment and learn to engage with one another. At Beebe, they are in uncomfortably close quarters. Outside, they have infinite space, but in a medium that is ultimately hostile to their biology.

The conflicts are on several levels. Lenie and the other team members have inner conflicts aplenty. Lenie repeatedly confronts and challenges the deep ocean that is her new home. Finally, the story is framed by a more complex socio-political conflict that Beebe Station, even though it is thousands of feet beneath the surface, cannot escape.

This book stayed in my head for a long time after I read it. _Starfish_ deserves better than a plane trip, but a time when you can pay attention.

4 out of 5 stars So atmospheric, so dark, so good.......2006-11-09

Lounging around the house, I picked this book up and started it. And then, a few pages into it, I put it down. It scared me. The world that Watts drops you into, right at the beginning, is so strong... so well created.... so evocative.... It just gives you chills... Makes you hear every echoing bang and strange creak and feel the terrible pressure overhead. I put this book down and turned on the TV, in fact.... Wanted some bright, technicolor, mindless drivel....

But then, two days later, after finding that I was thinking about it... I picked Starfish up again and..... read it straight through. I think I finished it around 3:15am last night (and got three hours of sleep before having to get up for work). This one goes in my list of very, very, very good books.

Again, Watts drops you right in the middle of it and you have to work to figure out what is happening. He assumes the reader has intelligence, which is really refreshing. Yes, there are some tidbits that we've experienced before (Sphere and The Abyss come to mind). But just tidbits. This is so much more. And pretty damn perfect. With one exception (the evil bureaucrat's speechifying explanations near the end). These few paragraphs were kind of jarring -- a simple plot mechanism, when I expected much more from such a skilled writer.

HOWEVER -- this does not detract a lot from my review. The rest of the writing was great, the characters are haunting, and the science folded into the story is fascinating. I can close my eyes and be down there, in the silty darkness with the fragile monsters...

Wow. Congratulations to Peter Watts.
I haven't been this affected by a science fiction book IN A LONG TIME!

5 out of 5 stars Fascinating............2006-07-08

Starfish delivers a captivating tale. I find it a plausible glimpse into our not so distant future.

I was intrigued as well as a bit terrified of Watts depiction of human beings bio engineered to live on the ocean floor. Terrified, because I placed myself within the characters shoes and I struggled to determine how I would retain my sanity constantly hearing the overwhelming pressure of the hand of the ocean trying to crush my undersea habitat and swimming in total darkness with monsters attracted by the slightest amount of light..

Watts covered all bases by coming up with a believable explanation of how people could face these undersea dangers and still remain "sane".

Add to that not one but two world ending threats as a cliffhanger and you have the makings of a great book. I loved it.

Euftis Emery
Author of Off the Chain
Revisions
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Excellent!
  • Delightful New Alternate History Shorts...
  • delightful what if alternate history tales
Revisions

Manufacturer: DAW
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback

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ASIN: 0756402409
Release Date: 2004-08-03

Book Description

Fifteen original tales of "what if"

Some of today's top science fiction writers explore the futures that might have been, including original stories from Julie E. Czerneda and other great names in the genre.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Excellent!.......2007-02-05

These are not your typical, predictable "what if someone went back in time and gave General Lee machine guns?" type of historical revision tales. Instead, they are based in real science, and speculate about how real, historical (or scientific) events could have changed the world if they happened in a just slightly (and realistically) different way. Brilliantly written, and very fun to read.

4 out of 5 stars Delightful New Alternate History Shorts..........2005-04-09

Unlike most alternate history anthologies, ReVisions consists of all new and original stories, a great change from the constantly re-hashed collections. All of the stories in ReVisions deal with some sort of technological, social, or anthropological change. There's everything from Nikola Tesla inventing the laser to the Sumerians creating the printing press, to what might have happened if dogs had never been domesticated or if Da Vinci's inventions had actually been put into effect.

The stories themselves, while creative and original, do not seem to have been edited as well as they might have been, keeping me from giving ReVisions a full five stars. It's a new release, and so you probably won't find it in used bookstores. That being said, I have no regrets about spending the full price to buy from Amazon.

The topics featured for diversion are best-suited for scientific and engineering types, but there are a few to satisfy those preferring socially-based or even anthropological stories.

5 out of 5 stars delightful what if alternate history tales .......2004-08-03

This fifteen short story collection contains what if alternate history tales that will delight genre fans. Each tale takes a key scientific or technological element and changes when it occurred so that it either intersects at an earlier pivotal moment in history such as the Sumerians inventing the printing press in BC or never materialized such as Galileo fails to release his findings. The tales are all well written and the explanation of the REVISION point is fun to follow to ascertain whether the reader agrees with the author's logic. Intriguing are those with a modern aspect to include Tesla inventing a laser in the nineteenth century, Livingstone bringing AIDS out of Africa in the nineteenth century and the government pushing aquanauts over astronauts and banning the Internet. Mindful of the Marvel Comics What If series, this terrific collection will have the audience thinking of new ones such as what if an underpaid over paid book reviewer was given a guitar instead of Narnia?

Harriet Klausner
English Accents and Dialects: An Introduction to Social and Regional Varieties of English in the British Isles Includes CD
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Can serve as a prelude to dialectology course
  • This is not a set.
  • Great intro and birds-eye view.
English Accents and Dialects: An Introduction to Social and Regional Varieties of English in the British Isles Includes CD
Arthur Hughes , Peter Trudgill , and Dominic Watt
Manufacturer: A Hodder Arnold Publication
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

GeneralGeneral | Dictionaries & Thesauruses | Reference | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 0340887184

Book Description

English Accents and Dialects is a unique introductory survey of the main regional and social varieties of English spoken in the British Isles. The authors discuss accent and dialect in the broader framework of language variation, including phonetic, phonological, grammatical, lexical, historical and stylistic differences. This is followed by a survey of the speech of different areas of the British Isles. The CD which accompanies the book consists of edited interviews (all transcribed in the book) with speakers from each of the different areas. The fourth edition has been expanded and updated to give substantial new information. Of particular importance in this new edition are the sections on Aberdeen, Galway, and Leicester.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Can serve as a prelude to dialectology course.......2005-11-07

Wonderful introduction into studying dialects and accents. Although not very suitable for a complete course on dialectology, it is nice to grasp the general idea of English variations on the British Isles. The CD is a must. The set will be valuable for students of English as a foreign language to prevent the shock of facing authentic casual speech, which may seem unintelligible to unprepared non-native speakers. Although it is not rich in theoretical issues, the book presents good material organization and easy to read text. The material presented in non-technical manner, lacks nuances, and mainly focuses on sound distinctions, mentioning intonation, stylistic appropriateness, cultural and historical grounds aside. On the other hand, it is one of the best introductory books for enthusiasts and non-linguists to get acquainted with language variations on the British Isles.

3 out of 5 stars This is not a set........2003-10-24

If you notice the Editorial review, it states "in the book" and "the tape which accompanies the book", so I thought I was getting both a tape and a book -- and I was in a hurry. I was surprised to receive only the tape (especially for $29.00). It has some good, if not always very understandable, native speakers of various dialects of Great Britain on it -- and without the transcriptions it is hard to grasp all the changes. I guess now I'll order the book and wait three weeks for that. It is a good resource for samples of some of the regional dialects not easily found in the major dialect source books.

4 out of 5 stars Great intro and birds-eye view........2001-07-03

OK, first the good points about the book. It's superbly organised, providing word lists at the beginning of every chaptre, which gives you a great idea of how different accents compare on identical sets of words. The intro about different styles and registers of Received Pronunciation, including grammatical points, is also of great help to understand how accents may differ. The tape is a must, and the dialogues in it are great, since they were recorded in a very spontaneous manner. OK, so, the sound's quality is not the best around, but you get spontaneous dialogues (and therefore more natural dialectal pronunciations) in exchange. The only problem I'd see is that is that stylistic varieties are not covered more in depth. J.C. Wells' "English Accents: An Introduction" and "English Accents: The Brittish Isles" offer a lot more information, cover more nuances of accent, and are in general more complete that this book. Anyhow, it's still quite a good buy if you're interested in regional varieties of English in the Brittish Isles.
Behemoth: B-Max
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Life after Behemoth?
  • ultra dark and gritty action-packed thriller
  • Exciting sci-fi!
  • The best so far!
Behemoth: B-Max
Peter Watts
Manufacturer: Tor Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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ASIN: 0765307219

Book Description

tarfish lit the fuse. Maelstrom was the explosion. But five years into the aftermath, things aren't quite so simple as they once seemed . . . Lenie Clarke-rifter, avenger, amphibious deep-sea cyborg-has destroyed the world. Once exploited for her addiction to dangerous environments, she emerged in the wake of a nuclear blast to serve up vendetta from the ocean floor. The horror she unleashed -an ancient, apocalyptic microbe called behemoth-has been free in the world for half a decade now, devouring the biosphere from the bottom up. But she has learned something in the meantime: she destroyed the world on false pretenses. Now, rifters and the corporate elite who created them cower at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, hiding from a world in its death throes. But they cannot hide forever: something lethal has found them in the depths. Something which has either violated the laws of physics to follow them here, or arisen from treachery within their own ranks. Suddenly, the rifters and their one-time masters remember that they are enemies. And the only thing standing between them is a woman with the blood of a world on her hands

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Life after Behemoth? .......2007-06-04

If _Maelstrom_ showed how the world ended, in _Behemoth: Book One: B-Max_, the reader gets to see what life is like after it is all over, at least among some of the survivors.

For the most part, the world of the _Starfish_ novels (the _Rifters_ trilogy, though technically the third book had to be split into two books for publishing reasons) has shrunk to a single location for this novel, a community established at the end of _Maelstrom_ (if community is the word one would use), a sometimes-friends, more-often-enemies collection of rifters and corpses located at the bottom of the mid-Atlantic Ocean. The corpses in desperation had established an underwater city that they hoped was going to make them not only safe from Behemoth (though they also had medical fixes to make themselves immune to Behemoth) but also any reprisals by a spastic, presumably dying world that was lashing out at both old foes and those presumed to be responsible for the world-ending plague. The rifters, lead by Lenie Clarke and Ken Lubin, found the corpses, at first with thoughts to exact revenge, but instead gradually were forced to work together by various circumstances, chief among them the facts that they were isolated from the rest of the world and were unsure who outside their underwater domain was left alive (and afraid to go looking thanks to the both incredibly hostile electronic lifeforms called Lenies and also a real fear of reprisals from nations and powers outside of North America).

Much of the action centers on the swirling politics of the Mid Atlantic Ridge community, largely from the point of view of the rifters, though there was a thread on the spiraling descent into completely amoral evil of the enormously powerful Achilles Desjardins. Readers from _Maelstrom_ will recall that not only is he free from Guilt Trip he is free from guilt of any kind, yet he still possesses the incredible powers of a `lawbreaker, needed now more than ever (and the powers that be are still completely unaware of his changed mental status). Though they weren't too graphic, I will say the chapters exploring the mind of Desjardins were pretty intense and somewhat disturbing, though some of it was a building sick dread, based on information the author gave to the reader bit by bit, and part of it was my imagination of what happened next after the book's focus switched back to the rifters and corpses.

I didn't think the book was quite a strong as either _Starfish_ or _Maelstrom_ and some of the stridently one-note political attitudes of some of the rifters got tiring and too much time spent at the underwater city made the setting feel a bit claustrophobic (though it did really help drive home themes of the rifters' and corpses' isolation and the destruction of the world). I also felt Watts could have developed some of the corpses a bit more, though as the books are really about the rifters that is understandable. Still, a good book and it held my interest. I am reading book two of _Behemoth_ at the moment and am enjoying it greatly.

4 out of 5 stars ultra dark and gritty action-packed thriller.......2004-07-27

Five years have passed since a vengeful cyborg Lenie Clarke released Behemoth on the world destroying everything in it path as the microbe is eating up matter. Digital monsters add to the pandemic devastation using Clarke as a rallying cry to devastate survivors through what is left of the Internet. Meltdown Madonna cults dedicated to Clarke pledge mass suicide as they rule alongside deadly war lords on the surface.

However, on the ocean floor, Lenie Clarke has learned the truth that her grudge was built on a false premise. As the altered rifters and the technoindustrial corporate executives hide in fear in Atlantis on the ocean floor of the Midatlantic Ridge, the grim reaper comes for them. Only Lenie Clarke can save the few, but first she must face the consequences of what she wrought for she knows she can never achieve salvation as she can not wash the blood from her hands even with water everywhere.

As with STARFISH and MAELSTROM, BEHEMOTH: B-MAX is an ultra dark and gritty action-packed thriller yet the tale as with the first two books is character driven especially by Lenie. The story line moves forward at a current faster than most science fiction novels, but contains irony throughout as Lenie learns the truth and like Lady Macbeth cannot simply wash the blood from her hands. Though B-Max is book one of a two book conclusion , this is a well written gripping entry, but fans of post apocalypse thrillers would be better served by waiting a few months for the release of the climatic novel and then read all four books in succession.

Harriet Klausner

4 out of 5 stars Exciting sci-fi!.......2004-06-29

Not only was this book believable and its characters eerily recognizable, in regards to such tense people in our own reality, but it compliments virtually every other sci-fi available, from the space operas like "Starship Troopers", "2001", "2010", "Rendezvous with Rama", "Advent of the Corps", but incorporates the high tech level of cyberpunk like "Neuromancer", "Prey", "Snow Crash", "Cyber Hunter", and many more. Great read!

5 out of 5 stars The best so far!.......2004-06-26

Before I can review the content of Peter Watts' "Behemoth: B-Max" there are two facts I need to mention. The first is that it represents the third book of a trilogy, and I would strongly recommend one tackle the first two volumes ("Starfish" and "Maelstrom") before reading this one. The second is that "Behemoth" should be one six hundred page book, but because of trends in the publishing industry it's being published as two separate volumes. The author is completely forthright about this fact, and I believe him when he says that this was not his preferred method of publication. Because of this approach, precious little is resolved in this first volume; so if you aren't a fan of cliff hangers, you might want to wait until "Behemoth: Seppuku" is published in late 2004/early 2005 to read this volume.

For those of you who are new to the series, here is a brief synopsis that should tell you whether or not these books are for you. Essentially, the story arc is about evolution: human, animal and electronic. By mixing a blend of biology, computer science and chaos theory, Watts has created a near future Earth where man is simultaneously at the height of his powers and walking the knife's edge of total ecological failure. In an effort to maintain the high standard of Western living mankind has turned to deep sea geothermal power to meet their energy needs. Miles below the ocean, specially engineered humans culled from the dregs of society maintain these power plants. However, what no one could have expected was that they would encounter an organism that would unleash an apocalypse. Part hard science-fiction, part post-apocalyptic, the first two books represent a genuinely original voice in the genre.

All that said, "Behemoth" represents another superb piece of writing by Watts; it contains all the tension and fascinating science of the earlier volumes, but also displays his increasing talent. The structure of the book is more sophisticated and subtle than the previous volumes, and I say this not to criticize the earlier books, but to highlight the strengths of this one.

Set five years after the events of "Maelstrom", "Behemoth" finds the remaining rifters and the surviving North American elite living in an uneasy truce on the floor of the Atlantic. Presumably safe from the disease that is ravaging the rest of the world, they have managed to come to an accommodation that allows everyone to live and let live. Foremost among the rifters are Lubin, the one time spy, and Lenie Clarke, the Meltdown Madonna herself. Opposite them is Patricia Rowan, their one time nemesis and sometime ally. Alone, they might have formed a shifting but stable triangle; however, their constituents, particularly the more militant rifters, force a situation that is never far from open warfare. This dichotomy is beautifully executed by Watts, and represents a shift in his approach. Where much of the tension in the prior two books was environmental, in "Behemoth" he has created a human drama that surpasses its astonishing location.

In contrast from the fragile existence on the ocean floor, the reader is presented with the contrast of Achilles Desjardins, the human god who fights chaos for the CSIRA. While occupying perhaps only a third of the book, these chapters are the most powerful. Consisting only of Achilles' thoughts, history and worldview, they paint a comprehensive portrait of one of the most powerful men on Earth. Perhaps most remarkable is that Watts makes him despicable and sympathetic at the same time, all while keeping him something of an enigma.

Given the fact that this is the third book of a trilogy, and further given the split nature of the title, any more attempts at a plot summary would risk grave spoilers. Simply put, it is science fiction as it should be written. Watts uses his setting as a means to consider our slow suicide as a species in the form of ecological decay, and the complex, and ultimately unknowable workings of the mind. He separates himself from much of what is on the market by injecting humanity and pathos into his writing; his world, no matter how brilliantly conceived and executed, is a means to a greater end. This stands in stark contrast to other "hard" SF novels which exist solely to cram technical information into a fictional setting while ignoring such fundamentals as plot and characterization.

What is perhaps most engaging about Watts' books is that he has made the mundane unique and terrifying. No one gives much though to the web as an environment, but he sees an electronic landscape filled with predators and prey. Most of us think of the ocean as the beach, but Watts reveals a world every bit as alien as the surface of another planet. Finally, his attention to detail is superb, without being overwhelming. Watts' world is replete with history, but much of it is only alluded to; this creates a world that is weighed down by history, and a novel that isn't. An excellent example of this detail is his web site. I can't post the URL here, but a simple web search will turn it up. There one can find mountains of what one might call "side-story" it doesn't fill in any gaps per se, but it does further flesh out the Earth of the 2050's.

If you're a fan, a probably have said more than I needed to to sell you on this book. However, if you are new to the series, I hope I have managed to pass on the incredible originality and superb writing Watts has to offer. This is a trilogy that is unique in my experience, and "Behemoth" represents the best contribution thus far. This is definitely not one to be missed.

Enjoy!

Jake Mohlman
MCSE Windows 2000 Directory Services Exam Cram (Exam: 70-217)
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Good Complement to the Microsoft Training Kit
  • Good Book!
  • Passed on the first try
  • Spend your study time reading other study books for 70-217
  • This Is The Best Book Of The Series!!!
MCSE Windows 2000 Directory Services Exam Cram (Exam: 70-217)
David Watts , Will Willis , and J. Peter Bruzzese
Manufacturer: Coriolis Group Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

MCSEMCSE | Exams | Certification Central | Computers & Internet | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 1576106888

Book Description

Implementing and Administering a Windows 2000 Directory Service Infrastructure exam (70-217) is one of the required exams to establish MCSE certification credentials under the Windows 2000 certification program. Provides two complete practice exams featuring questions designed to assess the reader's readiness to take the exam, and the answers and explanations that reinforce the reasoning behind the correct answers. Features an exclusive Self-Assessment section that will help the reader evaluate their knowledge base against the requirements for MCSE certification under both ideal and real circumstances. Contains sample questions and practice tests much like the format of the actual exams.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Good Complement to the Microsoft Training Kit.......2002-03-18

I found this book to be well written. It was clear and presented in a logical order. The material was a very good complement to the material in the Microsoft Training kit. I learned additional test relevant material. Exam Crams are consistently one of my top three study resources, this was one of the best so far.

5 out of 5 stars Good Book!.......2002-01-08

This was my 22nd exam that I've taken and I've used the Exam Prep/Exam Cram books for over half of them. I would say that this was one of the better ones that I've read. The book covered all the topics and gave procedures on how to do things for a couple of key concepts that you need to know. This is something that the other Exam Crams usually lack. I would highly recommend this book to someone who is already familiar with AD and Win2K.

3 out of 5 stars Passed on the first try.......2001-12-11

I used this book as my only resource for exam 70-217. Read the whole thing in about a week and passed. This is not as well written as Exam Cram for 70-210, and there are plenty of test questions that were more advanced than what's covered by the book. But I'm still grateful for this title as it got me passed the exam with less than a week's effort, so I can get back to work on real life instead of wasting my time on dreamed up MS scenarios that are completely twisted and seldom practiced by any IT organization. If you read all the materials and do every question, you will pass. As with other cram books, this title contains the bare minimum you need to pass, so if you skipped any sections or spaced out while reading some sections, you'll likely fail. If your goal is to learn Windows Directory Services or you're not already an MCSE for NT 4, you may be better off looking elsewhere.

2 out of 5 stars Spend your study time reading other study books for 70-217.......2001-10-09

While Coriolis does some excellent work with the COMPTIA exams, I found once again that their Exam Crams for MCSE were of little value for a exam.

The test questions at the end of each chapter were nothing like what you will see on the test. The content was OK, but not really presented in a way that easily explained key concepts (use MS Press books for this).

What I did find in this book and the related "Question of the Day" emails from Coriolis for this exam is information that is not really relavant to 70-217. I passed the exam, and the much of subject matter I read in this book in my opinion was not on the exam.

Buy the book if you like reading. Skip it for others if you want to be more effective with your time.

5 out of 5 stars This Is The Best Book Of The Series!!!.......2001-10-09

I don't normally write a review for a book but one of the reviews from a guy named Larry Dunn really hit a sore spot. He wrote the same review for all the books in the core pack and just posted it for all books. That indicates to me that he probably didn't read them, nor do I think he has the ability to read.

If you're looking for a book that covers all the subject matter for this exam and want to have key points highlighted and a strong practice test, then this is the book for you. That doesn't mean you shouldn't work with Windows 2000 Server and Active Directory. It doesn't mean you shouldn't go out and get additional testing materials. It doesn't mean you shouldn't surf the web for more help. It simply means that for a 400 page cram this is a great way to review those topics on the exam that you will encounter.
Behemoth: Seppuku
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Satisfying ending to an intriguing series
  • Some images aren't worth seeing
  • ugh, don't bother
  • Behemoth
  • Satisfying conclusion to a fascinating series
Behemoth: Seppuku
Peter Watts
Manufacturer: Tor Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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ASIN: 0765311720
Release Date: 2004-12-09

Book Description

Lenie Clarke-amphibious cyborg, Meltdown Madonna, agent of the Apocalypse-has grown sick to death of her own cowardice.For five years (since the events recounted in Maelstrom0, she and her bionic brethren (modified to work in the rift valleys of the ocean floor) have hidden in the mountains of the deep Atlantic. The facility they commandeered was more than a secret station on the ocean floor. Atlantis was an exit strategy for the corporate elite, a place where the world's Movers and Shakers had hidden from the doomsday microbe szlig;ehemoth-and from the hordes of the moved and the shaken left behind. For five years "rifters" and "corpses" have lived in a state of uneasy truce, united by fear of the outside world.But now that world closes in. An unknown enemy hunts them through the crushing darkness of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. szlig;ehemoth- twisted, mutated, more virulent than ever-has found them already. The fragile armistice between the rifters and their one-time masters has exploded into all-out war, and not even the legendary Lenie Clarke can take back the body count.Billions have died since she loosed szlig;ehemoth upon the world. Billions more are bound to. The whole biosphere came apart at the seams while Lenie Clarke hid at the bottom of the sea and did nothing. But now there is no place left to hide. The consequences of past acts reach inexorably to the very floor of the world, and Lenie Clarke must return to confront the mess she made.Redemption doesn't come easy with the blood of a world on your hands. But even after five years in pitch-black purgatory, Lenie Clarke is still Lenie Clarke. There will be consequences for anyone who gets in her way-and worse ones, perhaps, if she succeeds....szlig;ehemoth: Seppuku concludes the final act (begun in szlig;ehemoth: szlig;-Max) of Peter Watts's chilling and powerful Rifters series.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Satisfying ending to an intriguing series.......2007-06-16

Peter Watts concludes his _Rifters_ saga in the fourth and final volume, _Behemoth: Book Two: Seppuku_. Watts had written that he originally planned a trilogy but that changes in the publishing industry had forced him to divide his rather large final volume into two novels, but that he was fortunate to have a good breaking point between the two books and two resulting novels that were different in scope. It seems to have been a good choice, as while _Behemoth_Book One_ focused nearly entirely on the undersea refuge of the corpses and rifters (along with our old friend Achilles Desjardins), _Book Two_ spent no time there at all but instead allowed the reader a tour of a post-Behemoth North America, a taste of international politics, and of course the end game between Lenie Clarke, Ken Lubin, and Achilles (and a new character that the book introduces, a physician by the name of Taka Ouellette).

Overall I found it satisfying. The post-apocalyptic world we got to see was believable and interesting though wasn't perhaps as well-explored as what we got to see in _Maelstrom_. We were shown much more of the sick and sadistic pleasures of Achilles. While never really entering "torture porn" territory, the reader is left with a sense of disquiet (at least this one was) about how far the author would go in that regard. I didn't think it gratuitous, as this was a fundamental aspect of Achilles' character and of what had happened to him regarding his conscience, but it still nonetheless made me a bit uncomfortable at times (and makes me wonder just what the future holds for some forms of entertainment, given the evolution of horror films and the continual apparent need for succeeding films to outdo one another, a point I think the author was trying to make).

I liked the ending, it had two interesting twists I really enjoyed and didn't devolve into what it could have been (one character simply killing another, story over). The world at the end of the novel is fundamentally different and not necessarily a world without hope. It is also a world that would be interesting to see explored in a later novel.

I would like to express my displeasure at this series being out of print despite its recent age (_Seppuku_ came out in 2004). That is a real shame, as it is a worthwhile and interesting series, an excellent addition to the end of the world sub-genre of science fiction as well as probably the finest novel to ever handle the deep sea and ocean themes. The series overall was well researched (the author himself was a marine biologist) and had well-developed characters, a fascinating setting, and was an intriguing exploration of developing trends in our world.

1 out of 5 stars Some images aren't worth seeing.......2007-03-07

I loved Starfish. I appreciated the smart science (hey, gotta love SF with bibliographies!); I found the world riveting and the characters well-drawn. But I cannot, in good conscience, recommend this book. The sequence of sexual sadism, which stretches on for chapter after excruciating chapter, is simply too visually explicit to be worth experiencing. It's an image I just didn't need, and one I can't get out of my head. It includes an eroticized clitoridectomy, for goodness sake. For me, that sequence overshadows everything else in the book, and however much you may want to see the resolution of issues raised in the other books, be sure you're willing to have that image stuck to your eyeballs before you buy or read this volume.

2 out of 5 stars ugh, don't bother.......2006-06-13

The first book, "Starfish" was amazing, just a great read. This last book is horrible! Confusing, pointless, and extremely degrading, I wish I had never read it. I agree whole heartedly with "aisian film c" above! The rape and torture of one of the more sympathetic characters is what really pushed this book into the crapper for me.

4 out of 5 stars Behemoth.......2005-04-09

An anaerobic microbe from the deep sea may have delivered the coup de grace to an already struggling mid-21st century world.

It makes more sense to me to review the whole series when it's one story -- so here goes.

I was very surprised to find that the mass market editions of these books are out of print -- even as the final hardcover has only just been released. I can't understand why this series wouldn't get more support, because in my opinion it has everything that successful science fiction needs. Watts incorporates big, shiny ideas -- and the deep-sea biology is a wonderful original touch. The books include a high level of action and tension and, pleasantly unusually for "idea" SF, are strongly character-driven. And the characters are tormented enough for anyone.

There are flaws. At times, the plot is unclear, and while I like the pivotal role played by ignorance and misunderstanding, at times an irritating back-and-forth plot dynamic (Seppuku is a cure, no it isn't, yes it is) appears. Characterization, while overall excellent, at times seems over the top -- it's not entirely clear why *everyone* is so messed up, and the stupid bickering between the Rifters and the corporates in Atlantis left me with sympathy for neither side. I was put off by the apparent indifference of the characters to the impending destruction of Earth's whole ecosystem -- but then, they're selfish and profoundly damaged people, and creating sympathy for them in the reader's mind does not seem to have been Watts' priority. I would have found the aforesaid destruction more effective had it been shown more clearly.

But, despite all these quibbles, I think this series is really good SF, and I highly recommend it.

5 out of 5 stars Satisfying conclusion to a fascinating series.......2005-03-01

First off, for those of you haven't already read "Behemoth: B-Max" (at least) you will definitely want to do so before tackling "Behemoth: Seppuku". For reasons that the author explains in the first volume, they constitute one book that was split into two due to pressures in the publishing issue. This novel does not stand alone, and will make no sense without reading the previous volume. Furthermore, there are two other volumes in the series "Starfish" and "Maelstrom" and while each entry stands on its own fairly well, reading the books in order would definitely be the approach I would recommend.

For those of you who are new to the series, here is a brief synopsis that should tell you whether or not these books are for you. Essentially, the story arc is about evolution: human, animal and electronic. By mixing a blend of biology, computer science and chaos theory, author Peter Watts has created a near future Earth where man is simultaneously at the height of his powers and walking the knife's edge of total ecological failure. In an effort to maintain the high standard of Western living mankind has turned to deep sea geothermal power to meet their energy needs. Miles below the ocean, specially engineered humans culled from the dregs of society maintain these power plants. However, what no one could have expected was that they would encounter an organism that would unleash an apocalypse. Part hard science-fiction, part post-apocalyptic, the first two books represent a genuinely original voice in the genre.

For those of you who have been eagerly awaiting "Seppuku" rest assured the ending is eminently satisfying. Given the two volume approach, it is difficult to offer much in the way of plot details without providing spoilers, but I can say that after the somewhat broader focus of "Maelstrom" and "B-Max" the story has gone full circle and boiled back down to the most perverse trinity of characters one is likely to find: Lenie Clarke, Ken Lubin and Achilles Desjardins. As the three engage in a power-play in which no one's motivations are clear and the fate of the world hangs in the balance, action takes precedence over thought, to sometimes disastrous effect. Nonetheless, the science and technology which has so defined this series is on ample display and is as prescient as ever.

Of particular note, I found the conclusion to be perfectly enigmatic. This is post-apocalyptic fiction, and a happy ending would have been wildly out of place, but Watts' conclusion recognizes this without being entirely bleak. In this regard, his novel owes more to "Alas, Babylon" with it's open ended conclusion, than the superb, but utterly fatalistic "On the Beach".

To say more would risk huge spoilers, so suffice it to say "Sepukku" is every bit the conclusion I was hoping for. Watts has combined hard science fiction and post-apocalyptic fiction and taken both in new and exciting directions. If you're a fan of the series, you'll be glad at the way it ends; if you're intrigued by this review, grab "Starfish" and start from the beginning.

Jake Mohlman
MCSE Windows 2000 Active Directory Services Infrastructure Exam Cram 2 (Exam 70-217)
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Nothing wrong here!
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MCSE Windows 2000 Active Directory Services Infrastructure Exam Cram 2 (Exam 70-217)
David Watts , Will Willis , Peter Bruzzese , and Ed Tittel
Manufacturer: Que
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ASIN: 0789728710

Book Description

MCSE Windows 2000 Active Directory Services Infrastructure Exam Cram 2 (Exam 70-217) is the perfect study guide to help you pass one of the four core exams in Microsoft's Windows 2000 certification program. This certification exam measures the ability to install, configure, and troubleshoot the Windows 2000 Active Directory components, DNS for Active Directory, and Active Directory security solutions. In addition, this test measures the skills required to manage, monitor, and optimize the desktop environment by using Group Policy. This book is not intended to teach new material. Instead it assumes that you have a solid foundation of knowledge but can use a refresher on important concepts as well as a guide to exam topics and objectives. This book focuses exactly on what you need to pass the exam - it features test-taking strategies, time-saving study tips, and a special Cram Sheet that includes tips, acronyms, and memory joggers not available anywhere else. The series is supported online at several Web sites: examcram.com, informit.com, and cramsession.com.</p>

The accompanying CD features PrepLogic™ Practice Tests, Preview Edition. This product includes one complete PrepLogic Practice Test with approximately the same number of questions found on the actual vendor exam. Each question contains full, detailed explanations of the correct and incorrect answers. The engine offers two study modes, Practice Test and Flash Review, full exam customization, and a detailed score report.</p>

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MCSE Windows 2000 Active Directory Services Infrastructure Exam Cram 2 (Exam 70-217) is the perfect study guide to help you pass one of the four core exams in Microsoft's Windows 2000 certification program. This certification exam measures the ability to install, configure, and troubleshoot the Windows 2000 Active Directory components, DNS for Active Directory, and Active Directory security solutions. In addition, this test measures the skills required to manage, monitor, and optimize the desktop environment by using Group Policy. This book is not intended to teach new material. Instead it assumes that you have a solid foundation of knowledge but can use a refresher on important concepts as well as a guide to exam topics and objectives. This book focuses exactly on what you need to pass the exam - it features test-taking strategies, time-saving study tips, and a special Cram Sheet that includes tips, acronyms, and memory joggers not available anywhere else. The series is supported online at several Web sites: examcram.com, informit.com, and cramsession.com. This ebook does not include the CD that accompanies the print edition.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Nothing wrong here!.......2005-12-20

I use Exam Crams as a final round up for my studies. They rarely fail and this one is no different!

4 out of 5 stars Quick and Concise.......2004-10-23

the Exam Cram books are great. I like the fact that they are a quicker read and really get to the point. Pay attention to the alerts - they accurately reflect points that came up on the exam. This book combined with testking's online practice exam (...) and I passed the test easily. Well, I studied my (...) off, but using these two resources I was well prepared.

5 out of 5 stars One of the best study guides I've used.......2004-04-01

I have studied for six Microsoft tests, reading between two and five books for each. Of all those books, this one was one of the most outstanding. This book made the difference for me in feeling unprepared for the test before I read it to scoring 800 two days after I finished it. Excellent, organized, detailed coverage. If you have a lot of hands on experience, this book is probably all you'll need. If, like me, you need additional study due to lack of experience, I'd recommend including some extra focus on DNS.
Dictionary of the Old West
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • darn tootin best dictionary on the Old West ever!
  • Watts has done an admirable job.
Dictionary of the Old West
Peter Watts
Manufacturer: Random House Value Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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Similar Items:
  1. Cowboy Lingo
  2. The Log of a Cowboy: A Narrative of the Old Trail Days

ASIN: 0517119137
Release Date: 1994-09-13

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars darn tootin best dictionary on the Old West ever!.......2001-10-17

Normally, I am not a big fan of Westerns, either novels or movies (or TV series or even really non-fiction works either), but I couldn't resist this book. This almost 400 page work details exhaustively any Western term, definition, piece of equipment, animal, plant, or slang you could ever want to have defined.

Some examples? Sure! Many slang terms are defined. Above my huckleberry means basically out of one's control. A granger was a settler or farmer, as opposed to a cattleman. A soiled dove is a prostitute. A grub pile is cooked food; a meal. A mockey is a wild mare.

Watts details more than fun to read slang though. He has some fairly extensive definitions as well. You learn that the term ghost town was probably never even used in the 19th century for instance. There is a nice map and defintion for cattle trail, showing the route of the Chisolm Trial, the Shreveport Trail, and others. There is more cattle and horse related terms than you ever imagine, from entries on castration to hot-bloods to peggers to under-bits. There is an extensive discussion of stampedes, particularly on how they relate to writers of fact and fiction.

Many defintions are accompanied by 19th century style illustrations or rarely photographs, often showing equipment such as pole fences, chuck wagons, soddies, and mantillas and animals and plants such as elks, prickly pears, heelers, grizzly bears, and burros.

So if you have even a slight interest in the Old West, rattle your hocks and get this book! It's a mother lode of terminology, fits for fans of the history of the Old West or of novels and movies set in it.

5 out of 5 stars Watts has done an admirable job........1999-01-23

Peter Watts' stated purpose was to create a guide for the readers of Western Americana - to identify the words and phrases used in the Old West during the period 1850-1900. He furnishes the "how" and "why" of standard range words such as: roping, brands, saddles, trail drives, and so forth.

Watts faced several obstacles in the preparation of this book. A major obstacle was separating words, which originated in the writings and communications of the twentieth century, from those which were actually used on the western frontier. Watts freely admits he wasn't always successful in separating genuine words from admixed and adulterated words.

Another problem was the discovery that 19th century records, diaries, et. al., listing eyewitness' accounts of historical events, contained an abundance of misspelled or inaccurate words and phrases. Watts offers little help in proper pronunciation because there is no way of knowing how some words were pronounced by people long dead. In their lifetimes, the western pioneers heard various colloquialisms, sometimes incorrectly, and often mangled words and their meaning when making conversation or when keeping diaries and other records.

Another factor was the polygot population inherent on the American frontier. Anglo- Saxons brought English and Celtic words to the United States, some of which were further influenced by the speech and pronunciation used by Africans, Spaniards, and people of French descent. Gold seekers from Europe, American Indians, Metis, Dutch, Swedes, Swiss, and many other races also contributed to the words and phrases used throughout the Old West.

Cattle range words generally originated with the Mexican vaquero. These words were changed, twisted, and combined with English by the American Cowboy into the range language often used today. Language grows healthy and powerful with the infusion of words from the various strata of a society and this held true in frontier America. Watts contends the educated class causes a language to lose its rich taste, its contact with all the people, and its very means of renewal unless lower class words are continually being added.

This book is incomplete but not by design. It was an impossible task to capture every frontier word and phrase; however, Watts has done an admirable job under the circumstances. He used reliable sources such as Andy Adams and Ramon Adams, used a number of dictionaries, and read the works of western fiction writers Wister, Haycox, Grey, L'Amour, Short, et al., in order to identify crucial words used in the Old West.

This is a pretty good book which will prove of immediate value to readers interested in Western Americana. Watts' book is as complete and as accurate as time and circumstances have allowed.

Authors:

  1. Waugh, Evelyn
  2. Weaver, Robert
  3. Weber, David
  4. Weber, Joe
  5. Webster, John
  6. Weckstein, Leon
  7. Wedekind, Frank
  8. Weigl, Bruce
  9. Weinberg, Robert
  10. Weinberger, Eliot

Authors

Authors