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Kiln People - Community Reviews back

by Beth Meacham, David Brin
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Readundant
Readundant rated it 13 years ago
I like sci-fi, but man, a lot of these dudes are long-winded (and how do they manage to write so freaking many books regardless? Fantasy authors too especially). I picked this one up because it was lauded and I loved the concept: a future society where people sit on their asses on the couch and send...
kristenrenn
kristenrenn rated it 14 years ago
I had high hopes for this book. I love stories that cross the SF and mystery genres, and I'm always intrigued by the idea of copying personality. This just got bogged down with so many copies of all the characters running around simultaneously, with little distinction between them. I was very disa...
SF Fan Man
SF Fan Man rated it 15 years ago
In the rarified sub-genre of SF doppelgangers, this must be, I am sure, a favorite. Years after I first read this book, I am still thinking about it, so there must be something here.David Brin writes the story tongue-in-cheek (I mean baking yourself a duplicate is kinda outrageous, isn't it?), but ...
"Check Six"
"Check Six" rated it 17 years ago
5 Stars don't seem enough for this one. Such realistic science, you expect to see this capability in the near future. Believable and edge of the seat action.
"Check Six"
"Check Six" rated it 17 years ago
5 Stars don't seem enough for this one. Such realistic science, you expect to see this capability in the near future. Believable and edge of the seat action.
The Cranky Old Reader
The Cranky Old Reader rated it 18 years ago
This is a tough book to review.It's good. Quite good. But David Brin has written better.Kiln People is extremely clever, funny, original, and memorable. It presents a very original idea: a future society in which people can temporarily spin off copies of themselves in clay duplicates, "inloading" th...
Osho
Osho rated it 22 years ago
I thought this was the worst of Brin's novels. I was interested and engaged, then found the ending dull and dissatisfying. A rewrite of the last few chapters would have made this as fun to read as his other works.
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