JonathanHDavis reviewed Stories of Your Life and Others by Ted Chiang
Nice
4 stars
Several great stories and plenty of good ones. A fun read overall!
Paperback, 325 Seiten
italiano language
Am 21. Juni 2021 von Sperling & Kupfer veröffentlicht.
Lo studio di una lingua aliena; un ormone che aumenta l'intelligenza; un mondo funestato dalle apparizioni angeliche; il mito della Torre di Babele e quello del golem; una rivista scientifica del futuro; un ritocco al cervello che rende indifferenti rispetto alla bellezza; una rivoluzionaria dimostrazione matematica che finisce per negare il concetto stesso di matematica. Questi sono i soggetti degli otto racconti di Ted Chiang, tra i quali «Storia della tua vita», la novella che ha ispirato il film «Arrival».
Several great stories and plenty of good ones. A fun read overall!
Ted Chiang is the best, and I think he needs no explanation. The best-known story in here is "Story of Your Life" (better know as the film Arrival). But, I think the best story in here is "Hell is the Absence of God." All of the stories left me thinking a bit after, and I'm continuing to do so now. The last set of stories in my version were also in Exhalation, so I skipped over them.
Questo libro sembra scritto ieri, eppure ha già più di vent'anni.
Tutti i racconti sono affascinanti, ma soprattutto l'ultimo racconta una facciata della società… attualissima. Non vedo l'ora di leggere altro di Chiang, se è tutto di questo livello… wow.
This is my favorite format of science fiction : short but thought provoking stories. Surprisingly, the story that gave the name to this book is far from being the best in my opinion. If you want mind-bending novels that are both fun and at the same time disturbing, this book is a must-read.
特德姜擅长把一个概念拓展成一个世界。他的故事是另一个世界的一片截面,常常是我们随着主角一起去探索世界。其力量感也正在于此。
我特别喜欢审美滤镜那篇。
Leído solamente "Story of Your Life", cuento en el que se basó Arrival (2016). Lo disfruté tanto como la peli.
This short-story collection is ideas-driven, not character-driven, and very good. In a way, it feels like a throwback to the 1950s anthologies I read in my teens, minus any trite cliches or stereotyped characters. And the ideas presented in Chaing's stories are exciting. What if in ancient Babylonia, you could buil a tower to heaven? What would the logistics be? What if the letters used to activate a golem was like its DNA? What would the world be like if biblical angels came to earth fairly regularly? And that other one, about beauty - excellent food for thought.