Difference between revisions of "Mandala (novella)"
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− | + | '''Bear, Greg. "Mandala."''' ''New Dimensions: Science Fiction: Number 8.'' Robert Silverberg, ed. NYC: Harper & Row, 1978. Collected in Bear's ''[[The Wind from a Burning Woman]]''. See Internet Speculative Fiction Database for other collections.[http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?44859] Audiobook: Narrated by George Guidall and Christina Moore. "Published by Recorded Books. [...P]ackaged and distributed by Blackstone Audio," (c) 1992. | |
+ | See for figuratively living, definitely highly mechanized (cybernetic) cities, with cyborgs, robots, automatic extensions of the City, plus aging of the city and its reorganization — and some movement by a City. Important story for the relationships between cities and their human inhabitants (with one end of the curve, so to speak, cities' expelling humans), and with injuries to and healing of the human body. | ||
− | + | Cf. and contrast cities in [[MORTAL ENGINES (film)]], "[[The Caves of Steel]]," K. S. Robinson's ''[[2312 (novel)|2312]]'' (the city of Terminator), Bear's own ''[[Eon (novel)|Eon]]''; additionally [[DARK CITY]], and [[THE THIRTEENTH FLOOR]]. | |
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− | Cf. and contrast cities in [[MORTAL ENGINES (film)]], "[[The Caves of Steel]]," K. S. Robinson's ''[[2312 (novel)|2312]]'' (Terminator), Bear's own ''[[Eon (novel)|Eon]]''; additionally [[DARK CITY]], and [[THE THIRTEENTH FLOOR]]. | ||
RDE, finishing, 1-12Sep22 | RDE, finishing, 1-12Sep22 | ||
[[Category: Fiction]] | [[Category: Fiction]] |
Revision as of 17:13, 12 September 2022
Bear, Greg. "Mandala." New Dimensions: Science Fiction: Number 8. Robert Silverberg, ed. NYC: Harper & Row, 1978. Collected in Bear's The Wind from a Burning Woman. See Internet Speculative Fiction Database for other collections.[1] Audiobook: Narrated by George Guidall and Christina Moore. "Published by Recorded Books. [...P]ackaged and distributed by Blackstone Audio," (c) 1992.
See for figuratively living, definitely highly mechanized (cybernetic) cities, with cyborgs, robots, automatic extensions of the City, plus aging of the city and its reorganization — and some movement by a City. Important story for the relationships between cities and their human inhabitants (with one end of the curve, so to speak, cities' expelling humans), and with injuries to and healing of the human body.
Cf. and contrast cities in MORTAL ENGINES (film), "The Caves of Steel," K. S. Robinson's 2312 (the city of Terminator), Bear's own Eon; additionally DARK CITY, and THE THIRTEENTH FLOOR.
RDE, finishing, 1-12Sep22