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Paperback The Fortunate Fall Book

ISBN: 0312863276

ISBN13: 9780312863272

The Fortunate Fall

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Like New

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Book Overview

Maya Andreyeva is a "camera", a reporter with virtual reality broadcasting equipment implanted in her brain. What she sees, millions see; what she feels, millions share. "Gripping. . . . One of the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Impressive first work that joins the ranks of Gibson, Stephenson, Sterling, et al.

For you William Gibson, Bruce Sterling, & Neil Stephenson fans, I have a book to recommend. I know, I know: you've seen this and that book touted as the next Gibson or the next Stephenson, yadda yadda. Well, it's not the next anything, but his own work, and he's damned good. The book is The Fortunate Fall, by Raphael Carter, and it will hack your backbrain the way the Neuromancer trilogy, Virtual Light, or Snow Crash did. I've been trying to get through Gibson's 'Virtual Light' for more than 6 months now and keep setting it aside out of boredom and frustration. 'The Fortunate Fall' took me two days and that's only because I forced myself to slow down and savor it. You might say 'Fortunate Fall' is the book 'Virtual Light' would like to be. In any case, if you enjoy post-cyber-fi that makes you think about the world in new ways, snag a copy of 'The Fortunate Fall.'

So little. but so good....

Raphael Carter shows incredible potential in his debut novel, published in 1996, but where is the sequel or prequel!An enormous dark world springs into life on the pages of "The Fortunate Fall", leaving this reader wanting much more, I first read this book (not much more then a novellete) 3 - 4 years ago, and like all great sci-fi does, it stuck with me, but after re-reading, and finding it just as good (I think the third time) as the 1st, I was much disappointed to find that there is no follow up work.I too felt that the geekness of this dark and forbidding place was much better technically then Gibson, but then again Gibson himself has stated often that he was not much into tech when wrote his seminal work Neourmancer. I especiallly like the plugs and sockets described in this book, and you need no go further then recent headlines news (May, 2002) describing how rats brains have been hardwired (cabled!) in experiments aimed at creating remote "camera's" how prophetic can you be?I love grand epics, like Julian Mays classic series, but this was is a great little book.

Brilliant Post-Cyberbunk Debut Novel

This is really, really, good. Set in the 23rd century, the Russian narrator (Maya) is a telepresence "camera": she "witnesses" news events, or anything which could be a story, and her total impressions (sensorium, plus memories: the latter including implanted memories of research on the subject) are transmitted over the net to her audience, although the output is "screened" by another individual (a "screener") who is totally linked with the camera, and who apparently filters sensitive or personal material, and makes sure that the sensorium output comes through OK (red looks red, stuff like that). We slowly learn that Maya has a "past" which she cannot remember, because memories of it have been suppressed, and that that past is related to her love life. We also learn that her world has emerged in recent decades from the domination of a group called the Guardians, and that it is now bifurcated into the technologically advanced, but isolated, African continent, and to something called the Fusion of Historical Nations, which seems to be a shaky reestablishment of roughly 20th century political boundaries.Maya's latest story is about some of the key events in the liberation of Russia from the Guardians. As she begins her story, her old screener quits and she gets a new one. This new screener is revealed to have quite remarkable abilities, and also seems to quickly fall in love with Maya, which is difficult for Maya to handle because her sexual emotions are suppressed. Maya and Keishi (the new screener) begin to investigate some details of the defeat of the Guardians, details which are for some reason potentially embarrassing to the "new world order". Staying one step ahead of the law, Maya travels across Russia and through the net in search of an interview with a man who has some secrets about the Guardians, their successors, and the nature of the world and the net.Carter pulls off a number of exciting, brilliant things. The nature of this new world and its history are carefully and slowly revealed, along with Maya's own past, and the resolution is well integrated, the tragic ending is both a surprise and not a surprise, and is "earned". The technological and social details of life in the FHN are wonderfully well realized. In many ways, this book is reminiscent of Bruce Sterling in the way future tech and future society are densely integrated with the narrative, and seem so possible. The terminology (Postcops, Weavers, greyspace, etc.) is intriguing, and is introduced in such a way as to seem natural (there are very few lectures), but also be part of the mysteries which are slowly revealed. The realization of the how "mindlink" technology might really affect the world, and also the images of cyberspace, are believable and original. The prose is very good, mostly clean and elegant, not showy, but occasionally erupting in apt and memorable images. In addition, the story has true momentum: it makes you want to kee

Brilliant post-cyberpunk

The Fortunate Fall is almost, but not quite, cyberpunk. It's got the nifty technologies, sure; but in place of cyberpunk's shallow, tragically hip veneer, Fall gives us three dimensional characters and emotional depth. The setting is a near future that is both plausible and startlingly different than anything I've seen before; the characters are superbly well-drawn; and the plot is unpredictable and engaging. The Fortunate Fall is an excellent debut novel, and I look forward to Carter's future output.

Utterly Superb

The sky above the port was the colour of television tuned to a dead channel. Okay, so The Fortunate Fall doesn't have quite as impressive an opening sentence as Gibson's genre defining work, but once I'd read Maya's reasons for writing the story down I was utterly hooked. Read it, you won't regret it.
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