Present Books In Pursuance Of Mockingbird
Original Title: | Mockingbird |
ISBN: | 0345431626 (ISBN13: 9780345431622) |
Edition Language: | English |
Setting: | New York State(United States) |
Literary Awards: | Locus Award Nominee for Best SF Novel (1981) |
Walter Tevis
Paperback | Pages: 288 pages Rating: 4.14 | 4892 Users | 528 Reviews

Point Appertaining To Books Mockingbird
Title | : | Mockingbird |
Author | : | Walter Tevis |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 288 pages |
Published | : | October 12th 1999 by Del Rey (first published 1980) |
Categories | : | Science Fiction. Dystopia. Fiction |
Chronicle Supposing Books Mockingbird
I could tell with in the first few paragraphs of this book I was really going to like it. The story starts with Robert Spofforth, a very special robot, in fact a Make Nine robot, whistling as he walks down the street. Now to me whistling is a very distinctive human trait. I know some birds can be taught to whistle and I'm sure someone has spent numerous hours of their life teaching their dog to whistle, but generally I think humans are the only entity on the planet bad ass enough to actually whistle as we walk through the woods or across the plains announcing our presence to everything "here I am". Alright so Tevis got my attention right away. I put the book on my stack of reading now books and promptly got caught up in a monster of a book 900+ that I checked out from the library and had a deadline to finish, a self imposed deadline as I still like to torture myself in ways that make no sense to any one else. It was a long time before I had a chance to get back to Mockingbird, but the whole time I'm flagellating myself with the large tomb from the library I'm thinking about Mockingbird.


Rating Appertaining To Books Mockingbird
Ratings: 4.14 From 4892 Users | 528 ReviewsCriticize Appertaining To Books Mockingbird
I could tell with in the first few paragraphs of this book I was really going to like it. The story starts with Robert Spofforth, a very special robot, in fact a Make Nine robot, whistling as he walks down the street. Now to me whistling is a very distinctive human trait. I know some birds can be taught to whistle and I'm sure someone has spent numerous hours of their life teaching their dog to whistle, but generally I think humans are the only entity on the planet bad ass enough to actuallyI chose not to read this based on an allegorical bent, and instead chose to enjoy the oh so clear voice of the Robot Who Would End Humanity. Of course, he'd do so only because it seems to be the only way to circumvent his programming to live to serve humanity, but them's the breaks, right, humans?Lol, no, this isn't a biting satire of us like the inestimable Roderick, but it does have some wonderful punches built right in to the text. First of all, don't let the whole christian reading (or
Reading for the third time - this time for an upcoming SFFaudio podcast. Still so good!================A Good Story is Hard to Find #110. Scott and Julie argue about the meaning of "Only the mockingbird sings at the edge of the woods."Neighbors tell them to take it to the edge of the woods because it's 2:00 a.m. and "some of us have work in the morning!" They quiet down long enough to discuss Mockingbird.Reading this the second time was just as good as the first time, if not better.My original

This is a beautiful book, John, and I think I can understand why it was one of your favourites. The combination of the tragic and the humorous, of the pathetic and the absurd, the hopeful and the hopeless is truly compelling. The way in which the author represented the power of the written word, of poetry, of reading as the way out of soporific loneliness and a direct route to achieving true intellectual and emotional independence as well as a sense of history, community of minds, of being
This was originally published in 1980, but I think it holds up amazingly well. One of the key reasons is the author built the story on a premise of people interacting less and less with each other and more with machines, with drugs, and with simply amusing themselves. The tendency to privacy, lack of relationship development, and shirking responsibility is taken to an extreme here but it addresses trends that have still been happening for the last 35 years since Mockingbird was published.The
Brave, brainy robot, Spofforth is tired of taking care of humans; he had done so for centuries. Bentley and Mary are just the humans to help, Bentley by teaching himself to read and then teaching Mary, start a journey of connection to each other and then to the rest of humanity. Marvelous look at why reading is so important and why we should never lose this great gift.
I could tell with in the first few paragraphs of this book I was really going to like it. The story starts with Robert Spofforth, a very special robot, in fact a Make Nine robot, whistling as he walks down the street. Now to me whistling is a very distinctive human trait. I know some birds can be taught to whistle and I'm sure someone has spent numerous hours of their life teaching their dog to whistle, but generally I think humans are the only entity on the planet bad ass enough to actually
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