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Spaceland by Rudy Rucker — book cover

Spaceland

by Rudy Rucker
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Overview

Joe Cube is a Silicon Valley hotshot -- well, a would-be hotshot anyway -- hoping that the 3-D TV project he's managing will lead to the big money IPO he's always dreamed of. On New Year's Eve, trying to impress his wife, he sneaks home the prototype. It brings no new warmth to their cooling relationship, but it does attract someone else's attention. When Joe sees a set of lips talking to him (floating in midair) and feels the poke of a disembodied finger (inside him), it's not because of the champagne he's drunk. He has just met Momo, a woman from the All, a world of four spatial dimensions for whom our narrow world, which she calls Spaceland, is something like a rug, but one filled with motion and life. Momo has a business proposition for Joe, an offer she won't let him refuse. The upside potential becomes much clearer to him once she helps him grow a new eye (on a stalk) that can see in the fourth-dimensional directions, and he agrees.

After that it's a wild ride through a million-dollar night in Las Vegas, a budding addiction to tasty purple 4-D food, a failing marriage, eye-popping excursions into the All, and encounters with Momo's foes, rubbery red critters who steal money, offer sage advice, and sometimes messily explode. Joe is having the time of his life -- until Momo's scheme turns out to have angles he couldn't have imagined. Suddenly the fate of all life here in Spaceland is at stake. Rudy Rucker is a past master at turning mathematical concepts into rollicking science fiction adventure, from Spacetime Donuts and White Light to The Hacker and the Ants. In the tradition of Edwin A. Abbott's classic novel, Flatland, Rucker gives us a tour of higher mathematics and visionary realities. Spaceland is Flatland on hyperdrive!

Synopsis

Joe Cube is a Silicon Valley hotshot—well, a would-be hotshot anyway—hoping that the 3-D TV project he's managing will lead to the big money IPO he's always dreamed of. On New Year's Eve, hoping to impress his wife, he sneaks home the prototype. It brings no new warmth to their cooling relationship, but it does attract someone else's attention.

When Joe sees a set of lips talking to him (floating in midair) and feels the poke of a disembodied finger (inside him), it's not because of the champagne he's drunk. He has just met Momo, a woman from the All, a world of four spatial dimensions for whom our narrow world, which she calls Spaceland, is something like a rug, but one filled with motion and life. Momo has a business proposition for Joe, an offer she won't let him refuse. The upside potential becomes much clearer to him once she helps him grow a new eye (on a stalk) that can see in the fourth-dimensional directions, and he agrees.

After that it's a wild ride through a million-dollar night in Las Vegas, a budding addiction to tasty purple 4-D food, a failing marriage, eye-popping excursions into the All, and encounters with Momo's foes, rubbery red critters who steal money, offer sage advice and sometimes messily explode. Joe is having the time of his life, until Momo's scheme turns out to have angles he couldn't have imagined. Suddenly the fate of all life here in Spaceland is at stake.

Rudy Rucker is a past master at turning mathematical concepts into rollicking science fiction adventure, from Spacetime Donuts and White Light to The Hacker and the Ants. In the tradition of Edwin A. Abbott's classic novel, Flatland, Rucker gives us a tour of higher mathematics and visionary realities. Spaceland is Flatland on hyperdrive!

Publishers Weekly

Like a Mbius strip, that mathematical curiosity in which one surface is produced by twisting judiciously then joining two ends of a ribbon, Rucker's new hard SF satire tweaks the dot-com Y2K subculture into a hilarious tribute to Edwin Abbott's Flatland (1884). Kencom techie Joe Cube fatally miscalculates how his increasingly dissatisfied, yuppie, dingbat wife, Jena, really wants to celebrate the millennial New Year's Eve. Joe should have remembered that Jena likes sex even better than he does. Instead he brings her two Dungeness crabs, a bottle of Dom Perignon and some really cool electronics, an experimental three-dimensional TV. This indigestible combination fizzles Joe's stab at romance, but the electronics sizzle, hurling Jena into the arms of Joe's skuzzy engineer pal, Spazz, and propelling Momo, a siren-voiced denizen of the fourth dimension, into Joe's life. For her own nefarious purposes, Momo cons Joe into helping her people, the Kluppers, against their mortal enemies, the Dronners. Only Joe's three-dimensional reality, Spaceland, separates the two warring races. Combining valid mathematical speculation with wicked send-ups of Silicon Valley and its often otherworldly tribespeople, Rucker achieves a rare fictional world, a belly-laugh-funny commentary on the Faustian dilemma facing a lumpish 21st-century tech-addicted everyman: What is the real price in human relationships, in love and friendship and compassion, of those cutesy little user-friendly gadgets that happen to materialize so innocently on our desks? (June 3) Forecast: A two-time Philip K. Dick Award winner, Rucker should benefit from the recent reissue of Flatland in a deluxe annotated edition. He is also the author of two nonfiction books on higher space, The Fourth Dimension and Geometry, Relativity and the Fourth Dimension. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

About the Author, Rudy Rucker

Rudy Rucker is a mathematician, computer scientist, professor and writer who has twice won the Philip K. Dick Award for best SF paperback original, and has published a number of successful popular books on mathematical subjects, including The Fourth Dimension and Infinity and the Mind. He lives in Los Gatos, California.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Like a Mbius strip, that mathematical curiosity in which one surface is produced by twisting judiciously then joining two ends of a ribbon, Rucker's new hard SF satire tweaks the dot-com Y2K subculture into a hilarious tribute to Edwin Abbott's Flatland (1884). Kencom techie Joe Cube fatally miscalculates how his increasingly dissatisfied, yuppie, dingbat wife, Jena, really wants to celebrate the millennial New Year's Eve. Joe should have remembered that Jena likes sex even better than he does. Instead he brings her two Dungeness crabs, a bottle of Dom Perignon and some really cool electronics, an experimental three-dimensional TV. This indigestible combination fizzles Joe's stab at romance, but the electronics sizzle, hurling Jena into the arms of Joe's skuzzy engineer pal, Spazz, and propelling Momo, a siren-voiced denizen of the fourth dimension, into Joe's life. For her own nefarious purposes, Momo cons Joe into helping her people, the Kluppers, against their mortal enemies, the Dronners. Only Joe's three-dimensional reality, Spaceland, separates the two warring races. Combining valid mathematical speculation with wicked send-ups of Silicon Valley and its often otherworldly tribespeople, Rucker achieves a rare fictional world, a belly-laugh-funny commentary on the Faustian dilemma facing a lumpish 21st-century tech-addicted everyman: What is the real price in human relationships, in love and friendship and compassion, of those cutesy little user-friendly gadgets that happen to materialize so innocently on our desks? (June 3) Forecast: A two-time Philip K. Dick Award winner, Rucker should benefit from the recent reissue of Flatland in a deluxe annotated edition. He is also the author of two nonfiction books on higher space, The Fourth Dimension and Geometry, Relativity and the Fourth Dimension. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

On the eve of the millennium, Silicon Valley researcher Joe Cube brings home an experimental machine that unexpectedly connects him with the fourth dimension. When Joe meets one of its inhabitants, a curious woman named Momo, she offers to show him the wonders of life beyond the confines of his three-dimensional realm a proposition Joe accepts despite indications that Momo's intentions are not as benevolent as they seem. The author of Realware gives an appreciative nod to Edward Abbot's Flatland, a classic tale of two-dimensional adventure, in this 21st-century allegory of progress and its foibles. As always, Rucker laces his hard science with ample doses of humor to create an sf adventure for the dot-com generation. A good choice for most sf collections. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Occasionally tasteless tale of a technogeek's misadventures in fourth-dimensional space, from the prolific mathematician and SF writer (Gnarl!,2000, etc.). Taking current mathematical understandings to absurd extremes, Rucker attempts a self-consciously hip genre satire that is also a postmodern revision of Edwin Abbott's two-dimensional allegory Flatland, failing at both. Set in Silicon Valley on New Year's Eve 1999, Joe Cube (Abbott's Flatland hero was "A. Square") takes home his start-up company's experimental three-dimensional TV screen, hoping to watch the millennial celebrations with his sexy wife, Jena. Alas, 3D television proves boring, and a brief jaunt on the town ends with Jena vomiting and not getting the sex she was after. As Joe lies awake, a cluster of pink blobs emerges from the screen, bumps into him, and announces, "I'm from the fourth dimension. My name is Momo. Fear me not." After coalescing into a lumpy facsimile of a human female, Momo gives Joe a "third eye" so that he can experience "vinn and vout"-the fourth-dimensional version of our in and out. Not only can he see through opaque surfaces, he can pass through them, too. Joe has edgy sex with Jena, who, after discovering her husband can see through the backs of cards, suggests a trip to a casino. They set off with Joe's colleague Spazz to Las Vegas, where Joe manages to win big, but finds his money stolen by an evil Donner (4D doppelgängers of Momo's Kluppers) and loses his wife to Spazz. Disgruntled, Joe returns to have a gratuitously disgusting fourth-dimensional dream that returns him to a traumatic incident from childhood. The tale goes from farce to worse as Momo announces that she wants to introduce newfourth-dimensional communications technology into our world, an act that is not without more absurdist complications. Not funny, not fascinating. For fans only.

From the Publisher

"Science fiction author-hero Rudy Rucker is an oddity and a treasure . . . . In these days of neat little marketing categories, few writers attempt to cover so much ground."—Wired

"His work links the largest possible cosmic view with the trivia and tribulations of everyday life . . . . He portrays thoroughly real, everyday people grappling with some far-fetched phenomenon . . . with comic results."—Fantasy & Science Fiction.

"A hilarious tribute to Edwin Abbott's Flatland . . . combining valid mathematical speculation with wicked send-ups of Silicon Valley and its often otherworldly tribespeople . . . belly-laugh funny."-Publishers Weekly

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2003
Publisher
Doherty, Tom Associates, LLC
Pages
304
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780765303677

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