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Heads [Paperback]

Greg Bear


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Paperback, 7 Nov 1991 --  
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Greg Bear
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Amazon.co.uk Review

Since his 1986 Hugo win for Blood Music Greg Bear has been notorious for massive and ambitious novels of hard science fiction. The unusually slim Heads is part of a loose "future history" sequence beginning with Bear's Queen of Angels. It's set on the colonised 22nd-century Moon where scientist Pierce hopes to outwit the third law of thermodynamics and bag the Nobel Prize by reaching absolute zero temperature. His AI assistant, an advanced "Quantum Logic thinker", predicts that matter itself may enter unknown states at true zero. Meanwhile Pierce's refrigerated lab, the Ice Pit, seems just the place for his family company to store 410 frozen human heads (including family members) left over from the abandoned dream of cryonic immortality. There's even a chance that new scanning techniques could read these brains' frozen memories. Bad news: one head belongs to the sinister founder of a cult--clearly modelled on L Ron Hubbard--and the powerful Logology movement will stop at nothing to keep those particular thoughts secret. Much tense politics follows. A sabotage attempt triggers the eerie climax as matter, bodies, souls and strange new quantum states flow together in the flux of absolute zero and the Ice Pit becomes a Fortean mystery. Bear blends scientific and mystical unknowns very neatly in this short but effective novel. --David Langford

FEAR

'Bear goes beyond the petty accelerations of the future which inspire lesser writers, and takes huge, intuitive and intelligent leaps'

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Amazon.com: 3.0 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Too short, 30 July 2000
By Robert Ketchum - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Heads (Mass Market Paperback)
I finished reading this book just over a week ago, and I must say the work is lacking. Bear has developed an interesting storyline with wonderful potential that is too rich to be smashed into 151 pages.There is only a superficial attempt at character development which makes the characters one dimensional. This is all very discouraging to the reader, becuase the premise is good sci-fi. In the future there is an independent moon colony originally developed by entrepreneurs. Our heros are a part of the moon elite syndicate of families. They are attempting two aspiring projects. 1)An experiment trying to create absolute zero, purportably able to freeze space-time itself (I'm not sure if this sounds very safe, although the characters seem only moderately concerned). 2)410 cryogenically frozen "Heads" from the 20th century, which will be scanned for memories still intact in their lifeless brains (wierd, but an interesting idea). If this work was stretched into a full length novel, Bear could have created some classic sci-fi, unfortunately he didn't.

I would recommend this book only to die-hard Greg Bear fans.


3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars It had a lot of promise..., 21 April 2000
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Heads (Mass Market Paperback)
Don't get me wrong. This book had a very good and original premise that could have had a great story made out of it. However, the writing in it is (in my opinion) pretty weak. Besides some fairly interesting history behind it, there is not much else. Also, a lot of the characters seemed pretty one-sided, but I can imagine that's hard to avoid in writing a relatively short story such as this.

2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Something Different from Greg Bear, 8 Jan 2005
By Dr. Christopher Coleman - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Heads (Mass Market Paperback)
I've become quite a Greg Bear fan lately--for Christmas I got both The Forge Of God and Anvil of Stars, and I'd finished both of them by Jan. 5. Delighted with them, I picked up Heads at a local bookstore, although I admit having some doubts about the book after looking at the blurb. It seemed an awful lot to juggle in such a small space--410 cryogenically stored disembodied heads, along with Moon colony politics and an attempt to reach absolute zero which might change the nature of matter and of time itself, all within about 150 pages. At the same time, I've ocasionally thought Bear was a bit too drawn-out, so I decided I'd give it a try.

Curiously enough, spacetime was indeed apparently affected by Heads, because I must have seen the future--I was right, and it was all a bit much to handle in such a short book. By necessity, Bear's writing was much more expository than usual, and I didn't find that very satisfying. The story was promisingly offbeat, but behind the story was a blatant parody of Scientology--now, I'm not a Scientologist, nor do I know any Scientologists and I have a healthy skepticism of any religion founded by a science fiction writer, especially one that espouses Body Thetans--ghosts of an alien civilization--as the source of physical illness. It's a valid target, but somehow I'd like a touch more subtlety, a soupcon of sophistication about it...perhaps that's a bit much to ask of a book titled after decapitated noggins...

At any rate, it's a good story, with an effective and creepy climax...it's merely the baldness of Heads that detracts.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 10 reviews  3.0 out of 5 stars 
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