Rainbows End

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Rainbows End
First edition cover
First edition cover
Author Vernor Vinge
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Science fiction novel
Publisher Tor Books
Released 16 May 2006
Media Type Print (Hardcover)
Pages 368 pp (first edition, hardback)
ISBN ISBN 0-312-85684-9 (first edition, hardback)

Rainbows End is a 2006 science fiction novel by Vernor Vinge, set in San Diego in 2025, in a variation of the fictional world Vinge created in his 2002 Hugo-winning novella "Fast Times at Fairmont High". Vinge has tentative plans for a sequel, picking up some of the loose threads left at the end of the novel.

The many technological advances depicted in the novel suggest that the world is undergoing ever-increasing change, perhaps destined for a technological singularity, a recurring subject in Vinge's writing (both fiction and non-fiction).

"Your hack was noticed. Back when I was young, you could have got a patent off it. Nowadays—"
"Nowadays, it should be worth a decent grade in a high-school class."

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

The novel introduces us to Robert Gu, a man slowly recovering from Alzheimer's disease thanks to advances in medical technology. As his faculties return, Robert must adapt to a very different world, where almost every object is networked and mediated reality technology is commonplace. Robert, formerly a world-renowned poet but with a notoriously mean-spirited personality, must also learn how to change and how to rebuild relationships with his estranged family. Robert and his granddaughter, Miri, later become involved in efforts to prevent the use of an ominous new technology with profound security implications.

Indeed the entire concept of security in such a world is another major theme of the novel. It looks at the implications of rapid technological change that empowers both the disgruntled individuals who would threaten to disrupt society and those that would seek to stop them, and the implications of that dynamic for the age old who watches the watchers issue. Security in an increasingly digital/virtual world has frequently been a theme in Vinge's work, but, although the 2001 attacks are only mentioned once, having been supplanted by more recent history in the minds of the characters, there is an unmistakable post-9/11 feel to parts of this novel. Vinge mentions offhandedly, "Chicago was more than a decade past. There hadn't been a successful nuclear attack on the U.S. or any of the treaty organization countries in more than five years."

[edit] Trivia and release details

  • Rather than the traditional book dedication to a person or group of people, Vinge dedicates the novel: "To the Internet-based cognitive tools that are changing our lives — Wikipedia, Google, eBay, and the others of their kind, now and in the future"
  • In "Fast Times", Miri Gu's father and grandfather were called Bill and William. In Rainbows End, they are changed to Bob and Robert, perhaps so that Miri's parents have the names of the cryptographic personalities, Alice and Bob. Eve is also present.
  • Vinge makes a passing reference to his own 1992 novel, A Fire Upon the Deep: "Who heard of Tines anymore, or the Zones of Thought?"
  • 2006, USA, Tor Books (ISBN 0-312-85684-9), Pub date 16 May 2006, hardback (First edition)

[edit] See also

[edit] External links