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» Hatrack River Forum » Active Forums » Books, Films, Food and Culture » John C. Wright's "Golden Age" novels

   
Author Topic: John C. Wright's "Golden Age" novels
Destineer
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I just finished the last of these, The Golden Transcendence. Very thought-provoking books! Has anyone else read one or more of them? I have a bunch of spoiler-heavy ideas I want to discuss, but before I bring a huge post to bear I want to make sure there's an audience.
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blacwolve
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They sound really interesting. What are they about?
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Destineer
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The three books in the series are one long story about a very-far-future libertarian society. The main character is a very ambitious post-human man, Phaethon, who discovers early in the story that some of his memories have been erased and goes about trying to discover what his plans were before he lost them.
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Destineer
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*bump*

Has anyone on Hatrack read these?

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Destineer
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Wow, apparently Wright is a pretentious prick. Or at least he comes across that way in this interview.

"[I]t is pusillanimous to write of small things when one can write of great.
The abyss of time holds wonders too large to fit inside one small world, or
the narrow confines of one cramped century. Science Fiction is meant to tell
us traveler's tales of places and aeons men cannot reach, but imagination
can."

"I write as my ferocious poet's heart commands; I fear I do not really have
any particular readers in mind when I am scribbling. It is certainly my hope
to entertain the dear readers, but I could not write for tastes I do not
share, even if I would."

"my ambition is not to write for this generation only, but for the ages."

Jeez, dude. You wrote a good sci fi trilogy. That doesn't make you the next Homer.

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King of Men
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Why not? After all, Homer only wrote two, and cribbed most of his material at that.
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TL
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quote:
"my ambition is not to write for this generation only, but for the ages."
All that means is he's a real writer. As a writer, you should set out to write a classic every time. You probably won't -- but if you're not trying, you're hack.

That's my humble opinion.

I may actually seek out the guy's books now. I like it when writers tell the truth. Most of the really great writers are not humble people.

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Amilia
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<---- Had to look up "pusillanimous." In case anyone else is wondering, it means:

quote:
lacking in courage and manly strength and resolution; contemptibly fearful

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Noemon
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I have a hard time imagining anyone using the phrase "my ferocious poet's heart" without their tongue planted fairly firmly in their cheek.
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Destineer
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TL, you should read the books. They're quite good.

Part of my ire has to do with Wright's gushing about what I think is a very flawed higher-education program: the Great Books system at St. John's. Don't get me wrong, I took a two-semester GB sequence as an undergrad and loved it, but the GB are only a portion of a good college education and should not be treated as the end-all and be-all.

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