Rainbows End

Front Cover
Macmillan, May 2, 2006 - Fiction - 364 pages
Four time Hugo Award winner Vernor Vinge has taken readers to the depths of space and into the far future in his bestselling novels A Fire Upon the Deep and A Deepness in the Sky. Now, he has written a science-fiction thriller set in a place and time as exciting and strange as any far-future world: San Diego, California, 2025.

Robert Gu is a recovering Alzheimer's patient. The world that he remembers was much as we know it today. Now, as he regains his faculties through a cure developed during the years of his near-fatal decline, he discovers that the world has changed and so has his place in it. He was a world-renowned poet. Now he is seventy-five years old, though by a medical miracle he looks much younger, and he's starting over, for the first time unsure of his poetic gifts . Living with his son's family, he has no choice but to learn how to cope with a new information age in which the virtual and the real are a seamless continuum, layers of reality built on digital views seen by a single person or millions, depending on your choice. But the consensus reality of the digital world is available only if, like his thirteen-year-old granddaughter Miri, you know how to wear your wireless access--through nodes designed into smart clothes--and to see the digital context--through smart contact lenses.

With knowledge comes risk. When Robert begins to re-train at Fairmont High, learning with other older people what is second nature to Miri and other teens at school, he unwittingly becomes part of a wide-ranging conspiracy to use technology as a tool for world domination.

In a world where every computer chip has Homeland Security built-in, this conspiracy is something that baffles even the most sophisticated security analysts, including Robert's son and daughter-in law, two top people in the U.S. military. And even Miri, in her attempts to protect her grandfather, may be entangled in the plot.

As Robert becomes more deeply involved in conspiracy, he is shocked to learn of a radical change planned for the UCSD Geisel Library; all the books there, and worldwide, would cease to physically exist. He and his fellow re-trainees feel compelled to join protests against the change. With forces around the world converging on San Diego, both the conspiracy and the protest climax in a spectacular moment as unique and satisfying as it is unexpected. This is science fiction at its very best, by a master storyteller at his peak.
 

Contents

Dumb Luck and Smart Thinking
13
Mr Rabbit Visits Barcelona
19
The Return
31
A Minefield Made in Heaven
37
An Excellent Affiliance
50
Dr Xiangs SHE
64
So Much Technology So Little Talent
69
The Ezra Pound Incident
76
Failure Is an Option
213
The Officer of the Watch
217
When Belief Circles Collide
230
The Bicycle Attack
239
In the Cathedral
245
The Library Chooses
252
You Cant Ask Alice Anymore
266
HowtoSurvivetheNextThirtyMinutes pdf
272

No UserServiceable Parts Within
83
Carrot Greens
96
An Excellent Thesis Topic
103
Introduction to the Librareome Project
111
Guardians of the Past Handmaidens of the Future
118
The Miri Gang Is Born
134
The Mysterious Stranger
146
When Metaphors Are Real
162
The Front Bathroom Incident
185
Alfred Volunteers
199
The Myasthenic Spelunker Society
206
The Revocation Attack
282
The Animal Model?
293
Dr Xiang Takes Charge
299
When the Network Stops
309
Bob Contemplates Nuclear CarpetBombing
313
The Minimum Sufficient Response
317
Freedom on a Very Long Leash
328
The British Museum and the British Library
339
The Missing Apostrophe
348
EPILOGUE
357
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Born in Waukesha, Wisconsin and raised in Central Michigan, science fiction writer Vernor Vinge is the son of geographers. Fascinated by science and particularly computers from an early age, he has a Ph.D. in computer science, and taught mathematics and computer science at San Diego State University for thirty years. He has won Hugo Awards for his novels A Fire Upon the Deep (1992) and A Deepness in the Sky (1999), and for the novella "Fast Times at Fairmont High" (2001). Known for his rigorous hard-science approach to his SF, he became an iconic figure among cybernetic scientists with the publication in 1981 of his novella "True Names," which is considered a seminal, visionary work of Internet fiction. He has also gained a great deal of attention both here and abroad for his theory of the coming machine intelligence Singularity. Sought widely as a speaker to both business and scientific groups, he lives in San Diego, California.

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