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Author:
Charles Stross
Publication
Date: July
2005
Publisher:
Ace
400
pages
Download
Accelerando for free
Summary
Three generations
of a gifted family deal with the arrival, then the aftermath, of
a technological Singularity that renders Humanity obsolete.
In
a Nutshell
The biggest
bang for your buck if you're looking for ming-boggling SF ideas;
but the plot is pretty thin.
Review
The heart of
Stross' Acceledando deals with a concept that is dear to
present-day SF authors and futurists: that of the Vingean singularity,
a theoretical point in our near-future where technological progress
will move so quickly that all futurist prediction models are useless.
Disregarding the fact that futurism has yet to come up with a single
prediction model that works besides Moore's Law, the concept of
a point in history where technology accelerates towards infinity
is definitely worthy of a little SF exploration.
Although the
Vingean singularity has been discussed in previous SF works (none
the least by Vernor Vinge, after which the concept is named), Charles
Stross proposes to actually walk the reader through the times leading
up to it, then through it and its aftermath. This clearly places
the novel in the realm of Big Ideas, and on that promise, it deliver.
In spades.
Quite frankly,
Accelerando dwarfs even Stephen Baxter's best works (such
as Manifold: Time) in terms
of mind-boggling concepts per square inch. Stross, with the carelessness
of the truly gifted, tosses about big ideas faster than the reader
can juggle them. This is a book for nerds, written by a proud one:
it talks about galactic routers, AI taking over Humanity, sentient
economics, and Matrioshka
brains, all within the span of a single, coherent story.
It's a good
thing these concepts are so strong and resounding, because plot-wise,
Accelerando is a little thin. The main character, Manfred
Macx, is some sort of copyright anarchist that's just too cool for
the world he lives in, and frankly, there's not much to love about
him. Things get a bit better with his daughter Amber, but not by
much. The main problem is that Stross chose extraordinary individuals
to present extraordinary times, thus missing an opportunity to make
the strangeness of emerging posthumanism resound on a more intimate
level with the reader.
In conjunction
with this, there is the fact that not much happens in the personal
lives of the protagonists. Events on a galactic scale unfold around
them and, yes, change their lives, but the protagonists do little
more than witness them, ponder them a little, and move on. This
might be made worse by the fact that the novel is actually a collection
of 9 short stories, published by Stross over a period of time; but
there is little sense of progression and action, and a lot of contemplation.
Luckily, it's not so bad considering how cool the changes happening
around turn out to be, but it's frustrating to see uninteresting
characters worry about their personal relationships while god-like
AI are busy dismantling the solar system to build a super-computer.
Another annoyance
I have with Accelerando is that, despite the alien world
it tries to depict as the novel advances, the author's metaphors
and points of reference remain deeply rooted in the present. It's
especially annoying at the start of the novel, meant to take place
20 years from now, where multiple references are made to current-day
netspeak, such as 'Slashdot effect' and 'blogging'. This plants
the first chapters of the novel firmly in wha I call 'nerd porn'
territory, a SF style that cares more about pandering to modern-day
technophiles than establishing believeability. To think the term
'blog' will be cool in 2025 is as silly as those old 50's SF novels
that used 'atomic' and 'laser' every 2 sentences. I already spoke
about this problem with Stross' style in my review of Singularity
Sky, and thankfully it's not as bad this time around.
Fortunately,
the 'nerd porn' effect dissipates after the first 3 chapters (although
a particular reference to 9/11 in the final chapter of the novel
was especially cringe-worthy), and Stross picks weirder and weirder
concepts to throw at the reader. Ultimately, the novel is a satisfying
joyride for the brain, and well worth a look by any SF afficiando.
As a side-note,
Stross spends a lot of time discussing DRM in the first chapters
of Accelerando, and it's worth pointing out that he totally
put his money where his mouth is: Accelerando is available
for download for free, as Mr. Stross decided to make his published
book available under a Creative
Commons licence. If you're interested, you can download the
ebook from the author's official
website. And if, like me, you end up enjoying it, be sure to
pick up a printed copy for your own book collection, or to give
to a friend. This sort of initiative is just too good not to encourage.
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