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5.0 out of 5 stars
"Lifeshaping" and another theme make this a landmark., 12 Oct 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: The Children Star (Hardcover)
This is a landmark piece of science fiction. It introduces two new themes which are likely to sweep the world of science fiction, eventually becoming part of its stock in trade.
The first of these is 'lifeshaping" -- the author's felicitous alternative to terms like "genetic engineering" or "biotech". The very term suggests the immense possibilities opening up as the result of current developments in microbiology. Joan Slonczewski, a professional microbiologist, very capably projects the good things we may be able to do, and makes them plausible. Her exploration of the moral and social implications is, in my estimation, much deeper than much of what commonly passes for "bio-ethics".
It's almost impossible to invent a theme that is entirely new to science fiction, and Slonczewski herself has written previously of "lifeshaping". However, sometimes a theme that's been around explodes into prominence because of developments that catch the public fancy -- in this case, the cloning of "Dolly". Cloning is (literally) a baby step towards lifeshaping, and may or may not be advisable in its own right, but it's important that the broader vision of lifeshaping figure into the discussion. "The Children Star" puts that vision forward eloquently.
One subtheme which I find particularly important is that lifeshaping can serve as an alternative to "terraforming". The latter is set up in this story as a straw man: inconceivably rough handling of a planet to make it human-habitable, in circumstances where the planet is more than a lifeless rock to start with. Personally, I anticipate that most planetary bodies will be found initially lifeless, and that we will have to use all the tricks at our command to establish a space frontier at all. Lifeshaping looks like a welcome addition to our toolbox, not a substitute for other aids.
Sooner or later, too, it will occur to somebody that if we can "lifeshape" human beings to fit extraterrestrial environments, we may be able to lifeshape diverse forms of human beings to fit an evolving ecology here on Earth.
I can't comment on the second landmark theme (yes, "lifeshaping" was just the first), because it's the surprise solution to a mystery which builds up throughout the story. Suffice it to say that it's more speculative than lifeshaping, but would justify the book all by itself.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Masterfully written and thoroughly engaging novel., 29 Mar 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Children Star (Hardcover)
Wow! This book turned out to be quite a surprise. I generally don't like "child-themed" science fiction so had left this one on my reading stack for a while. When I finally did get into the first few chapters, I found out how my preconceptions from the book's title, and the blurb on the back cover were totally off base.
The very depth of mathematics and biology that are explored, within the context of a most fascinating story, are both mind expanding and enlightening. There is quite a bit more here than first meets the eye. The plotting and storyline combined with the hard science make this a most memorable and worth while novel. Highly Recommended.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Ever heard of pantropy., 16 Oct 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: The Children Star (Hardcover)
James blish wrote stories where people are altered to fit the environment way back in the 50's, but maybe there's more to "lifeshaping" than that.unusual mixture. END
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