A collection of ten stories creates a realm of ""irrelevant miracles,"" where civilization-building is a pastime and death is an art, and offers unique interpretations of fear, love, guilt, greed, obligation, and obsession. Reprint. K. NYT. PW.
Alexander Jablokov writes science fiction for readers who won't give up literate writing or vivid characters to get the thrills they demand. He is a natural transition for non-SF readers interested in taking a stroll with a dangerous AI or a neurosurgeon/jazz musician turned detective, while still giving hardcore SF fans speculative flash, incomprehensible aliens, and kitchen appliances with insect wing cases.
From his well-regarded first novel, Carve the Sky, an interplanetary espionage novel set in a culturally complex 25th century, through the obscenely articulate dolphins with military modifications of a Deeper Sea, the hardboiled post-cyberpunk of Nimbus, the subterranean Martian repression of River of Dust, and the perverse space opera of Deepdrive, he has come to Brain Thief, a contemporary high-tech thriller with a class clown attitude.
The standout story, for me, is "Living Will" (1991), a story about an aging computer millionaire who's facing dementia, and has made, um, provisions to deal with it. The technical details haven't held up, but it's still a first-rate story. Killer ending. 4.5 stars, reprinted often: http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cg...
I bounced off the title story, oddball religious gobbledegook, and partially reread "A Deeper Sea," a long, moody story that's about learning to speak to dolphins, use them in warfare, and send them into space. 3 stars, maybe.
I may (or may not) reread more of this collection, which mostly doesn't seem to have aged well.
This is another in the "So good luke was willing to carry around a paper book to read it" category. Way at the top end of the top quintile.
I read "a deeper sea" a bit ago, and it was really interesting to see what the novel-length story was like when stripped down to it's bones; good stuff.
Personally, I like to recontextualize "Beneath the shadow of her smile" as a more intellectual re-telling of the "Casca" stories by Barry Sadler
Jablokov has a delightful style. Curious, intriguing stories. Some moments & characterization that reminded me of a darker Terry Pratchett.
"The Death Artist" explores has some explorations of gender/body identity that, despite elements which are problematic, I enjoyed.
"The Ring of Memory" used one of my favourite time-traveling tropes of an item that doesn't actually exist. While very different thematically & content-wise, there were elements that reminded me of the German show Dark.
"Many Mansions" I wanted more of.
"Deathbinder" I would love to see as like a Netflix series or something.
"At the Cross-Time Jaunters' Ball" had a delightful twist ending.
"A Deeper Sea" I kind of wish I hadn't read, due to material I found to be triggering for my specific set of traumas, and will be skipping in future reads.
For some trigger warnings (the ones that I remember) if you are needing them -->
This is a crazy, bizarre sci fi book. It's actually a compilation of different stories that he wrote for a sci fi magazine. I liked some, but mostly I just didn't understand a lot of it. I felt like he made up words and I had no clue what they meant.