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It is 5880ad., thirty five hundred years after both mortal and angelic civilizations destroyed each other in a war of meteorites over the immortality virus. In Alan's universe the great houses of Centorin have founded the Empire and largely overcome the Aldeb threat. While this tale is happening, the Centorins have their own concerns in the mechanoid wars of the last years before the rise of the Overmarshall.
Meanwhile, a few hundred light years beyond the bounds of the Empire, a thirty seven hundred year old Angel seedship of Earth, fearing its cargo of eleven hundred frozen human zygotes
…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
It is 5880ad., thirty five hundred years after both mortal and angelic civilizations destroyed each other in a war of meteorites over the immortality virus. In Alan's universe the great houses of Centorin have founded the Empire and largely overcome the Aldeb threat. While this tale is happening, the Centorins have their own concerns in the mechanoid wars of the last years before the rise of the Overmarshall.

Meanwhile, a few hundred light years beyond the bounds of the Empire, a thirty seven hundred year old Angel seedship of Earth, fearing its cargo of eleven hundred frozen human zygotes may be the last of the human race, has been searching for worlds to colonize. They have done well so far, and seeded ten worlds toward the Perseus Arm. They are now down to the last few of the seed of mankind that they can sew among the stars and want to be sure these last few precious ones are given the best possible home.

Instead of a hospitable planet, they find a stone giant with too much gravity for human life and a microplanet that must be artificial. Then they find the microplanet is using a communications protocol that could only come from the hack one of their crewmen did during their stay at their first study planet three and a half thousand years ago. That convinces their systems administrator that this must be a new hack, but she is unable to break it and must play along with the hacker's game.

Humans are known as 'vermin' by the Pronna. Sentient, cute, capable of being domesticated but never considered capable of rising much more than that. Then they find humans in the wild building their own starships and even using singularities to create wormholes. They find them using devices to overcome their mental shortcomings so they can accomplish things their unaided minds are not capable of. Since the ancient worldship of Mon is about to be abandoned anyway, maybe the humans are capable of inheriting it and learning to operate it after all, possibly allowing them to escape the Rikavik threat.

In here were recap the history of human civilization, from brute savagery to the conquest of interstellar space. We see what leadership it takes to bring them up, and what leadership it takes to hold them down. Thru it all we see people trapped in their own worldview and how they are held back because of it. If they don't know what is real, they can't tell how this future civilization will fare, just like we can't know how our own will fare now that we no longer know what's real.


Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.

Autorenporträt
I am a retired embedded systems engineer and sci-fi hobbyist from Hartford. Most of my stories concern Kassidor, 'The planet the hippies came from' which I have used to examine subjects like: What would it take to make the hippy lifestyle real? How would extended lifespans affect society? What could happen if we outlive our memories? How can murder be committed when violence is impossible?

I have recently discovered that someone new to science fiction should start their exploration of Kassidor with the Second Expedition trilogy. To the mainstream fiction reader the alien names of people, places and things can be confusing. This series has a little more explanation of the differences between Kassidor and Earth. In all of the Kassidor stories you will notice the people do not act like ordinary humans but like flower children from the 60's. It is not until Zhlindu that the actual modifications made to human nature to make them act that way are spelled out. To aide that understanding I've made The Second Expedition free.

I am not a fan of violence and dystopia. I believe that sci-fi does not just predict the future, but helps create the future because we sci-fi writers show our readers what the future will be and the readers go out and create it. I believe that the current fad of constant dystopia and mega-violence in sci-fi today is helping to create that world, and I mention that often in reviews and comments on the books I read. I also believe that the characters in those stories who are completely free of any affection are at least as unnatural as the modified humans of Kassidor.

In my reviews, * = couldn't finish it. ** = Don't bother with it. *** = good story worth reading. **** = great and memorable story. ***** = Worth a Hugo.