mahdi reviewed Výdech by Ted Chiang
75%
4 stars
Byly tam hodne nabuseny povidky, stejne tak par slabsich. Celkove povedena sbirka zaokrouhlime nahoru na 4 hvezdy.
hardcover, 368 pages
English language
Published May 7, 2019 by Knopf.
Ted Chiang tackles some of humanity’s oldest questions along with new quandaries only he could imagine.
In “The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate,” a portal through time forces a fabric seller in ancient Baghdad to grapple with past mistakes and second chances. In “Exhalation,” an alien scientist makes a shocking discovery with ramifications that are literally universal. In “Anxiety Is the Dizziness of Freedom,” the ability to glimpse into alternate universes necessitates a radically new examination of the concepts of choice and free will.
Including stories being published for the first time as well as some of his rare and classic uncollected work, Exhalation is Ted Chiang at his best: profound, sympathetic—revelatory.
Byly tam hodne nabuseny povidky, stejne tak par slabsich. Celkove povedena sbirka zaokrouhlime nahoru na 4 hvezdy.
Un poco como en La historia de tu vida, hay cuentos de todo tipo. Lo que tienen en común es que siempre se dejan leer muy bien. Ciencia ficción, sí, pero con una vuelta de tuerca. No es lo típico leer saifai ambientado en el bagdad antiguo. La historia que da título al libro, aunque no fue mi preferida, sí que es muy alienígena e interesante de leer. Quizás lo que menos me gustó fue la historia más larga del libro, que va sobre IA, y aunque no me enganchó muchísimo la historia en sí, sí que quería ver a dónde iba, pero acaba de una forma tan abrupta que te deja con mal sabor... Una de las historias va sobre la lengua, la escritura y la comunicación (¡Hola, La historia de tu vida!) y se nota que es un tema que al autor le interesa, porque siempre es un …
Un poco como en La historia de tu vida, hay cuentos de todo tipo. Lo que tienen en común es que siempre se dejan leer muy bien. Ciencia ficción, sí, pero con una vuelta de tuerca. No es lo típico leer saifai ambientado en el bagdad antiguo. La historia que da título al libro, aunque no fue mi preferida, sí que es muy alienígena e interesante de leer. Quizás lo que menos me gustó fue la historia más larga del libro, que va sobre IA, y aunque no me enganchó muchísimo la historia en sí, sí que quería ver a dónde iba, pero acaba de una forma tan abrupta que te deja con mal sabor... Una de las historias va sobre la lengua, la escritura y la comunicación (¡Hola, La historia de tu vida!) y se nota que es un tema que al autor le interesa, porque siempre es un gusto leerlo. Una tontería, pero también me han gustado las notas del autor al final del libro que hablan de la inspiración y las referencias para las historias.
Several great short stories, though the longest one in the book is not as successful. Chiang keeps the spirit of his previous book 'Stories of your life', with short narratives that investigate deep philosophical questions in a creative and engaging way, without being artificial. I found the earlier book to be brilliant cover-to-cover, while this one is more uneven.
Every story is a thought experiment—like the best episodes of Twilight Zone. I was completely absorbed. I still talk about stories in this collection. "The Great Silence," the story from the perspective of a (critically endangered) Puerto Rican parrot, left me choked up. "Omphalos," a pseudo-epistolary story from a timeline where creationism is real and science and religion are closely intertwined. I'm still telling people about those about 4 months after reading them.
Not sure why, but I'm ranking the stories:
1. Exhalation
2. The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate
3. Anxiety Is the Dizziness of Freedom
4. The Truth of Fact, the Truth of Feeling
5. The Lifecycle of Software Objects
6. Omphalos
7. What's Expected of Us
8. The Great Silence
9. Dacey's Patent Automatic Nanny
I don't usually read short stories but this one was recommended to me. Maybe I had too high expectations? Anyway, I enjoyed the first stories "The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate", "Exhalation" and the "The Lifecycle of Software Objects" and "Dacey's Patent Automatic Nanny". But I had a hard time engaging with all the other stories. I didn't find the ideas that interesting and for the most part, I didn't care at all about the characters/narrator of the story. Most of the stories were disturbingly weird to me. I was a little bit disappointed overall.
Many of the stories are glaringly built around a fixed idea so that the notes at the end are redundant—or are more interesting than the stories themselves. The surrounding texts are more filler than breathing worlds. "The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate", "The Lifecycle of Software Objects", and "Anxiety is the Dizziness of Freedom" are the most organic.
I kind of inhaled this, so I think that requires 5 stars. I’m trying to be more generous with 5 stars.
A lot of these stories really got me thinking. I enjoyed them, and will probably check out more stuff by Chiang.
Some really solid speculative fiction. The good stories are really good (Omphalos, Exhalation, Software Objects, Anxiety), and the collection as a whole was great.
Some really solid speculative fiction. The good stories are really good (Omphalos, Exhalation, Software Objects, Anxiety), and the collection as a whole was great.
My kind of sci-fi. Chiang transcends the engineering approach to life typical of much science fiction. He creates believable cultures that aren't superficial tweaks but shows a deep understanding of what life is about.
Confession time: I am in love with Ted Chiang. Deeply. I fell hard in 2003 with his story “Liking What You See: A Documentary.” Today, having finished “The Truth of Fact, the Truth of Feeling” and “Anxiety is the Dizziness of Freedom,” I’m head over heels. What a beautiful mind. The stories in this collection all dance around the nature of consciousness; of personality, decisionmaking, determinism. Communication, empathy, freedom, culture, storytelling, adapting to change. Everything we think about what makes us human, he takes in interesting directions. All told with grace, empathy, humility, compassion and gentle humor. All of them, every one, making me stop reading afterward to reflect.
Whoever you are, wherever you are, read these. You’ll grow.
You be good. I love you.
The author is a well-known short-fiction and technical writer with an unusually simple and lucid style at the sentence level. In that regard, he reminds me of Kazuo Ishiguro. This book is a collection of 10 good to excellent short stories that do not have strong plot development or dramatic conclusions but have clever and insightful themes with unusually deep intellectual rumination. Chiang is concerned about the intersection of technology and humanity, the costs of progress, linguistics, and the nature of human and animal cognition.