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Mass Market Paperback Artificial Kid Book

ISBN: 0441030955

ISBN13: 9780441030958

Artificial Kid

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Good

$11.69
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Book Overview

His bristled hair is laminated in plastic. He is armoured in leather and metallic scale trousers. Ceramic plates with a metal core fortify his scull. He is a professional combat artist working in an area of the city where the police have given up. They call him the Kid and his unthinkable acts of violence make him unbeatable.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Hilarious, Delightful Early Bruce Sterling Novel

With "The Artifical Kid", a young Bruce Sterling demonstrated his excellence in writing comedic novels, to which he would return much later, in full force, in novels like "Holy Fire" and "The Zenith Angle", among others. While his second novel isn't nearly as polished as his later classic "Schisimatrix", it does explore in embroyonic form, some of the same issues of identity and what it means to be human, that he did quite remarkably well in his mid 1980s work. I couldn't help but laugh as I worked my way through the pages of Sterling's early novel, observing that it's nearly as funny as some of Harlan Ellison's best satirical short fiction. For anyone who wishes to understand Sterling's development as a leading member of the cyberpunk literary movement, then this early novel of his is required reading.

It's the Def, Bruce!

The only problem I had with this book is that the exclamation of "Death!" and/or "Thank Death!" was not slurred as in "That's the Def, man!" which is a common slang term heard on New York City playgrounds. Other than that, I was gripping the pages wide-eyed in fear for my life at whatever was going to happen next. For real.

Sterling's Best

I'd have to say the artificial kid is my favorite Sterling Book. That Revolution one was kind of lame so I'd have to call this his first book.

The Artifical Kid really did change my life...

I found this book in the library, of all places, back when I was in junior high school in 1982. Crouched between all that hoary Silverberg and Simak that I didn't want to read, it said "Psssst!". I haven't been the same since. The Kid jumped out and smacked me across the forehead with his lush, tweaked-out postpunk setting and sweeping, interconnected plot. A little bit of old-world pangalacticism, a little futuristic DIY chopsocky, a bunch of toungues in cheeks, and loads of high-tech wetware polymers and lurching biomasses, from before wetware polymers and lurching biomasses were cool. And all the while, Sterling's trademark core of optimism shines through. It's taken the world about ten years to catch up to this baby, and it's about damn time. If you don't know Bruce Sterling, this is a fine place to start. Now, where's my Smuff? John Zero (jzero@onramp.net), Dallas, Texas

An excellent and amusing book: issues of fame and growth

This is the book which got me hooked on Bruce Sterling. A less poundingly gritty world than Gibson's and more playful as a result. It brings together aspects of fame and change - and the adolescent desire to seek one while shunning the other - in an enjoyable combination. The focus is still the action which let me read (and re-read) it for the escapist element.
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