Difference between revisions of "The Harrowers"
From Clockworks2
Jump to navigationJump to search (Created page with "'''Gregory, Eric. "The Harrowers." ''Lightspeed: Year One''', on line here.[http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/the-harrowers/] A post-catastrophe (plague) undead z...") |
|||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
A post-catastrophe (plague) undead zombie story, relevant here for modified red bears, each: | A post-catastrophe (plague) undead zombie story, relevant here for modified red bears, each: | ||
− | a twelve-foot, three-thousand-pound monster bred to consume as much flesh as possible [...]. The companies engineered the red bears to clear the forests of the dead, and on paper, it still sounds like a good idea: Carnivorous cyborg weapons, carrion-eaters with titanium-reinforced skeletons. They were supposed to be uninfectable, a walking immune system for the world outside. | + | a twelve-foot, three-thousand-pound monster bred to consume as much flesh as possible [...]. The companies engineered the red bears to clear the forests of the dead, and on paper, it still sounds like a good idea: Carnivorous cyborg weapons, carrion-eaters with titanium-reinforced skeletons. They were supposed to be uninfectable, a walking immune system for the world outside. ¶ Problem was, they got infected anyway. |
− | |||
− | |||
So see for the cyborg theme with an ursine embodiment, creating a bear/mechanism interface, and blurring not just the mechanical/organic antithesis but the living/dead as well. | So see for the cyborg theme with an ursine embodiment, creating a bear/mechanism interface, and blurring not just the mechanical/organic antithesis but the living/dead as well. |
Latest revision as of 18:54, 19 January 2020
Gregory, Eric. "The Harrowers." Lightspeed: Year One, on line here.[1]
A post-catastrophe (plague) undead zombie story, relevant here for modified red bears, each:
a twelve-foot, three-thousand-pound monster bred to consume as much flesh as possible [...]. The companies engineered the red bears to clear the forests of the dead, and on paper, it still sounds like a good idea: Carnivorous cyborg weapons, carrion-eaters with titanium-reinforced skeletons. They were supposed to be uninfectable, a walking immune system for the world outside. ¶ Problem was, they got infected anyway.
So see for the cyborg theme with an ursine embodiment, creating a bear/mechanism interface, and blurring not just the mechanical/organic antithesis but the living/dead as well.
RDE, Initial Compiler, 19Jan20