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704 pages, Hardcover
First published July 10, 2007
Robbie loved and respected humans, but there were times when he didn't like them very much.Another Doctorow I hadn't run across before, somehow, and not nearly as silly as its title would imply.
—p.12.
Christmas was coming up fast—one of the four Universal Christian Holidays recognized by the Dominion (the others being Easter, Independence Day, and Thanksgiving).I found the same things to like (and a few to dislike) in this novella as in Wilson's full-length novel Julian Comstock: A Story of 22nd-Century America, which I read back in 2009. This reads like an excerpt from that longer work.
—p.39
Once there was a woman in Delhi who married a djinn.Even though I'd read this one quite recently, in Neil Clarke's anthology More Human Than Human, I was happy to reread it here, a testament to the baroque and exotic power of McDonald's tale of AIs and water wars in a near-future India.
—p.81
I closed my eyes and remembered the clean tang of the sea.
"Let's just keep going," I said.
Beeman nodded. If he still had lips, I think he would have smiled.
—p.298
A helicopter. The sound always feels like a threat. Here comes a chopper to chop off your head.
—p.520
And, like all Nazi technology, she is seductively beautiful.The aerial battleship Goering is indeed a majestic Beast ("as Churchill always referred to her before his hanging"—p.525). But as always for me—or almost always, anyway—something rubbed me the wrong way about Baxter's story. Here, I couldn't reconcile the magnitude of this alternative Earth's divergence from our timeline with the existence of anything like Nazis or World War II. I still liked Bliss Stirling, Baxter's plucky heroine, though.
—p.526
By now, Captain Groton was perforce conversant with the ceremonial foods of the Midwest—string bean casserole, Jell-O salad, brats and beans—and the communal rituals at which they were consumed.
—p.558
I'd do anything for you, kid, she thought, but it wasn't tactically sound to let him know that, was it?
—p.604