- cross-posted to:
- sciencefiction@lemmy.world
- singularity@lemmit.online
- cross-posted to:
- sciencefiction@lemmy.world
- singularity@lemmit.online
He passed on March 20. One of the greatest “hard” science fiction writers, author of True Names, A Fire Upon The Deep, and other cyberspace classics. Link is to his death notice in the old school fanzine File 770. Moment of silence please. RIP.
Oh. My. God. No… I am really upset.
The Peace War was my first introduction to his works, and I have read all of his works. The science fiction community has lost another luminary to the vestiges of time.
Vernor, you were the best. I remember your writings and musings fondly.
Out of all of his work, I only read A Fire Upon the Deep. I don’t remember it very well at this point because I read it decades ago, but I do remember it being very good. And as it says, he was very influential. 79 isn’t super long, but it isn’t a short life either. And it was clearly a good one.
If you enjoyed A Fire Upon the Deep, you should definitely check out the other 2 books. The Children of the Sky is a straightforward sequel to A Fire Upon the Deep, more fun with the pack intelligences of the Tines. I really liked the idea of a pack intelligence surviving longer than an individual member in those books. A Deepness in the Sky has a hibernating technological spider civilization and human savants exploited and enslaved as basically hyper focused biological automatons. Also there are inflatable space ships. Working my memory to type this, I realize that I kinda want to read them again.
I’d have to re-read the first one again. I think I read it in high school and I graduated high school in 1995.
Wow. Did not expect that this morning.
RIP to one of the greats.Reread A Fire Upon the Deep just a week or two ago.
Amazing SF writer.