Greg Egan Livres
Greg Egan élabore des récits de science-fiction hard qui explorent l'ontologie mathématique et quantique, interrogeant la nature même de la conscience. Ses histoires examinent des thèmes tels que la génétique, la réalité simulée, le posthumanisme, le transfert de pensée, la sexualité et l'intelligence artificielle. Egan est reconnu pour son approche approfondie et intransigeante face à des sujets complexes et hautement techniques, introduisant souvent une physique et une épistémologie novatrices. Sa vision singulière repousse les limites de l'existence et de la réalité humaines.







Est-il possible de reproduire dans la réalité des tableaux fantastiques célèbres en créant des chimères ? Une drogue permet-elle de rejoindre et de joindre tous les possibles ? Le temps qu'on lui reconstruise un corps, un homme peut-il confier au ventre de sa femme le soin d'accueillir son cerveau ? Autant de questions, avec bien d'autres, que Greg Egan, l'auteur de science-fiction le plus éblouissant et le plus novateur de sa génération, soulève dans dix-huit nouvelles toutes plus originales les unes que les autres. L'oeuvre d'un virtuose dont on n'a pas oublié La Cité des permutants, L'Enigme de l'univers, Isolation et Téranésie, publiés dans la même collection.
The Best of Greg Egan
- 736pages
- 26 heures de lecture
Twenty of the very best stories and novellas from the award-winning master storyteller and rigorous, exploratory thinker, Greg Egan.
Crystal Nights and Other Stories
- 310pages
- 11 heures de lecture
The nine stories in Greg Egan's new collection range from parables of contemporary human conflict and ambition to far-future tales of our immortal descendants.In "Lost Continent", a time traveler seeking refuge from a war-torn land faces hostility and bureaucratic incompetence. "Crystal Nights" portrays a driven man s moral compromises as he chases an elusive technological breakthrough, while in "Steve Fever" the technology itself falls victim to its own hype."TAP" brings us a new kind of poetry, where a word is more powerful than a thousand images. "Singleton" shows us a new kind of child, born of human DNA modeled in a quantum computer who, in "Oracle", journeys to a parallel world to repay a debt to an intellectual ancestor."Induction" chronicles the methods and motives behind humanity s first steps to the stars. "Border Guards" reflects on the painful history of a tranquil utopia. And in the final story, "Hot Rock", two immortal citizens of the galaxy-spanning Amalgam find that an obscure, sunless world conceals mind-spinning technological marvels, bitter factional struggles, and a many-layered secret history.Greg Egan is the author of seven novels and over fifty short stories. He is a winner of the Hugo Award and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award.
After generations of travel, the spaceship Peerless may finally have achieved its goal - but the decision to return home may create more tensions than ever before.
Now a dozen years old, the award-winning collection continues to provide dozens of the best stories of the year, including work by renowned veterans and exciting newcomers, including Stephen Baxter, Michael Bishop, Terry Bisson, Pat Cadigan, Greg Egan, Eliot Fintushel, Michael F. Flyn, Lisa Goldstein, Jose Haldemnan, Katherine Kerr, Nancy Kress, Ursula K. Le Guin, Maureen F. McHugh, Robert Reed, Mike Resnick, Mary Rosenblum.
Schild's Ladder
- 336pages
- 12 heures de lecture
A modern masterpiece from 'One of the genre's great ideas men' (THE TIMES) nelwy packaged for a new audience
Diaspora
- 384pages
- 14 heures de lecture
In the 30th century, most people have chosen immortality, joining the polises to become conscious software. Others have opted for robot bodies, while some holdouts remain "fleshers." And then there's the Orphan, a genderless digital being grown from a mind seed. It's up to the Orphan and a group of refugees to find the knowledge that will save inhabitants from extinction.
Classic hard science fiction from a master. The generation ship Peerless is running out of space, and fuel - and prospects for survival ...
Distress
- 352pages
- 13 heures de lecture
On a utopian, man-made Oceania atoll, Violet Mosala, Nobel Prize winner and quantum physicist prepares to see off her rivals in the quest for the ultimate Theory of Everything. Burned out by recording the abuses of biotech for his tv news syndicate, Andrew Worth grabs the chance to follow Violet`s story. One by one her competitors are disappearing from the scientific summit. Who or what is to blame? Is one of the many cults-pro-and anti-science-narrowing the chances of her defeat by mortal means, or is there some other more esoteric force at work undermining the Theory of Everything Conference?


