Books: Kiln People Lobby  |  FAQ  |  Feedback  |  Today In History  | 

Books   e-Books   Music   Video   DVD   Computers   Camera/Photo   Electronics   Games   Toys   Housewares   Tools/Hardware   Outdoor Living   Software   For Dogs   Free Software Aisle   Worth Keeping  

The Periodical Stand   Fantastic Audio Books   The Baby Place   The Ideal Gift Store   CellPhone AddOns   Jewelry   Video Crossroads   eBook Universe   Top Line Software   Great Jokes And Gags   The Maple Book Corner   The Better Toy!   True Book Corner   The Sound Station  




 
Return To Prev Page

 Books: Kiln People
by David Brin

Click To See More Info
Click Image For More Info

Buy Now!

Click HERE for ...

  • Prices (new/used)
  • Availability
  • Additional Images
  • Similar Links
  • More Reviews
  • Additional Information

  • Mass Market Paperback: 576 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.54 x 6.90 x 4.24
  • Publisher: Tor Books; (January 7, 2003)
  • In-Print Editions: Audio Cassette (Abridged), Audio CD (Unabridged), Audio Download (Audible.com) |All Editions

Customers who bought this book also bought:
Review

Amazon.com
Just about everyone's had a day when they've wished it were possible to send an alternate self to take care of unpleasant or tedious errands while the real self takes it easy. In Kiln People, David Brin's sci-fi-meets-noir novel, this wish has come true. In Brin's imagined future, folks are able to make inexpensive, disposable clay copies of themselves. These golems or "dittos" live for a single day to serve their creator, who can then choose whether or not to "inload" the memories of the ditto's brief life. But private investigator Albert Morris gets more than he, or his "ditective" copies, bargain for when he signs on to help solve the mysterious disappearance of Universal Kilns' co-founder Yasil Maharal--the father of dittotech.

Brin successfully interweaves plot lines as numerous as our hero's ditectives and doggedly sticks to the rules of his created dittotech while Morris's "realflesh" and clay manifestations slowly unravel the dangerous secret behind Maharal's disappearance. As Brin juggles his multiple protagonists and antagonists, he urges the reader to question notions of memory, individualism, and technology, and to answer the schizoid question "which 'you' is 'you?'" Brin's enjoyment is evident as he plays with his terracotta creations' existential angst and simultaneously deconstructs the familiar streetwise detective meme--complete with a multilayered ending. Overall, Kiln People is a fun read, with a good balance of hard science fiction and pop sensibility. --Jeremy Pugh

More Reviews