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Accelerando

by Charles Stross
Accelerando by Charles Stross
★ 7.00 / 3
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Accelerando is a collection of nine interconnected short stories.

"A new kind of future requires a new breed of guide – someone like Stross." – Popular Science

"Where Charles Stross goes today, the rest of science fiction will follow tomorrow." – Gardner Dozois, Editor, Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine

Charles Stross "can be compared to Greg Egan, Stephen Baxter, and Vernor Vinge for the depth of his speculations" (Paul Di Filippo, Science Fiction Weekly) as proven in such innovative hard SF novels as Singularity Sky ("wonderfully inventive", The Denver Post) and Iron Sunrise ("[a] hard SF masterpiece", Library Journal).

Now, expanding upon his award-winning short story cycle from the pages of Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, Charles Stross presents a startling vision of humanity's inability to cope with rapid technological advancement.

The Singularity. It is the era of the posthuman. Artificial intelligences have surpassed the limits of human intellect. Biotechnological beings have rendered people all but extinct. Molecular nanotechnology runs rampant, replicating and reprogramming at will. Contact with extraterrestrial life grows more imminent with each new day.

Struggling to survive and thrive in this accelerated world are three generations of the Macx clan: Manfred, an entrepreneur dealing in intelligence amplification technology whose mind is divided between his physical environment and the Internet; his daughter Amber, on the run from her domineering mother, seeking her fortune in the outer system as an indentured astronaut; and Sirhan, Amber's son, who finds his destiny linked to the fate of all of humanity.

For something is systematically dismantling the nine planets of the solar system. Something beyond human comprehension. Something that has no use for biological life in any form...

An ideological tour-de-force, Accelerando is destined to stand beside Neuromancer and Snow Crash as one of the most seminal works in science fiction.

 

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Science FictionShort StoriesLocus Award
Release date: 2005
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Charles Stross

Charles Stross

Charles Stross doesn’t just write science fiction—he reverse-engineers the future. Whether unraveling the complexities of AI, economics, or cosmic horror, his stories feel less like speculative fiction and more like eerily plausible roadmaps to tomorrow. A former software developer and technical writer, Stross brings a hacker’s mindset to storytelling, dissecting the machinery of reality and exposing the glitches beneath.

Born in Leeds, England, Stross grew up surrounded by the last vestiges of the Industrial Age, a landscape that would later inform his fascination with systems—both human and technological. Before becoming a full-time author, he dabbled in everything from pharmacy to computer science, experiences that lend his work an uncanny level of authenticity. His early exposure to computing and online culture made him one of the first sci-fi writers to deeply explore the implications of a hyper-connected world, long before the tech boom turned cyberpunk into a reality.

Read more ...

Stross’s novels don’t fit neatly into a single box. The Laundry Files series fuses Lovecraftian horror with bureaucratic spy thrillers, where eldritch horrors lurk beneath layers of government paperwork. The Merchant Princes saga reinvents the multiverse as an economic battleground, blending parallel-world fantasy with the ruthless logic of trade and power. And then there’s Accelerando, a dizzying ride through posthuman evolution, where minds upload, corporations become sentient, and capitalism itself mutates into something unrecognizable.

A multiple Hugo Award winner and perennial nominee, Stross has built a reputation for stories that challenge, provoke, and entertain in equal measure. His work resonates with readers who enjoy the intellectual thrill of Neal Stephenson, the dark humor of Douglas Adams, and the genre-defying scope of Iain M. Banks. Whether charting the rise of AI or the collapse of civilization as we know it, his writing is a warning shot fired from the near future—a reminder that science fiction isn’t just about imagining what’s next, but preparing for it.

When he’s not conjuring new dystopias, Stross can be found blogging about politics, technology, and the weirder edges of reality at his website, where his sharp insights often blur the line between fiction and the unsettling truth.

More books by Charles Stross

Shining Worlds Book 2 (Shining Worlds #2)
⧗ 8.00 / 1
Ghost Engine (Shining Worlds #1)
⧗ 10.00 / 1
The Regicide Report (Laundry Files #14)
⧗ 8.00 / 1
A Conventional Boy (Laundry Files #13)
Unrated
Season of Skulls (The New Management #3)
⧗ 8.00 / 1
Quantum of Nightmares (The New Management #2)
Unrated
Invisible Sun (Empire Games #3)
Unrated
Escape from Puroland (Laundry Files)
Unrated
Dead Lies Dreaming (The New Management #1)
Unrated
The Labyrinth Index (Laundry Files #9)
★ 8.00 / 1
Dark State (Empire Games #2)
Unrated
The Delirium Brief (Laundry Files #8)
Unrated
Empire Games (Empire Games #1)
Unrated
The Nightmare Stacks (Laundry Files #7)
Unrated
The Annihilation Score (Laundry Files #6)
Unrated
Equoid (Laundry Files)
Unrated
The Rhesus Chart (Laundry Files #5)
★ 7.00 / 1
Neptune's Brood (Freyaverse #2)
★ 7.00 / 3
The Rapture of the Nerds
Unrated
The Apocalypse Codex (Laundry Files #4)
★ 8.00 / 1
Palimpsest
★ 6.00 / 1
Rule 34 (Halting State #2)
Unrated
Scratch Monkey
Unrated
The Fuller Memorandum (Laundry Files #3)
★ 8.00 / 1
Trade of Queens (The Merchant Princes #6)
Unrated
Wireless
Unrated
The Revolution Business (The Merchant Princes #5)
Unrated
Saturn's Children (Freyaverse #1)
★ 7.66 / 3
On Her Majesty's Occult Service (Laundry Files)
★ 8.00 / 1
Halting State (Halting State #1)
★ 9.00 / 1
Missile Gap
Unrated
The Merchants' War (The Merchant Princes #4)
Unrated
The Jennifer Morgue (Laundry Files #2)
★ 5.00 / 1
Glasshouse
★ 7.66 / 3
The Hidden Family (The Merchant Princes #2)
Unrated
The Clan Corporate (The Merchant Princes #3)
Unrated
Iron Sunrise (Eschaton #2)
★ 7.66 / 3
Timelike Diplomacy (Eschaton)
★ 8.00 / 1
The Family Trade (The Merchant Princes #1)
★ 8.00 / 3
The Atrocity Archives (Laundry Files #1)
★ 7.76 / 4
Singularity Sky (Eschaton #1)
★ 8.12 / 8
Toast
Unrated

Reviews and Comments

04/08/2013
J.L. Dobias avatar
J.L. Dobias
69 books, 59 reviews
★★★★★★★★☆☆ 8 / 10

Accelerando by Charles Stross The last thing this book needs is another review. It seems to run the whole gamut of stars in the system. It's that type of book that has a love hate relationship. There seem to be a lot of complaints about the overflow of cyber geek talk which doesn't surprise me. What did surprise me is that I went right through this book with only a couple pauses to look up words. It seems I cut right through the geek talk without flinching. Maybe I should say blissfully through. Since it might be argued that I was bliss-ed just enough to remain unaffected. What some of the longest -geek-speak passages reminded me of was some stuff I'd recently tried to digest at the Depau science fiction studies site.:: http://www.depauw.edu/sfs/backissues/81/fernbach81art.htm ::this one in particular was what kept coming to mind every time we took a trip down through all the buzzwords and slang from every notion of cyber punk and the socioeconomic of the net. There were complaints that this is not how they will be talking in the distant future. Get real people if you can pick out the slang I will give you that but buzzwords are forever they just shift around in meaning through the years. I suppose if you can read the articles for the science fiction studies without much pause then Accelerando shouldn't affect you. There is something to say about the characters being a bit distanced and dysfunctional enough that you don't seem to feel for them. I have a feeling that Charles Stross may have been going for that. Another thing that Charles did was he put together a tough combination of things that would drive any writers forum crazy. Much of this book is written in first person and present tense. Other part seem to be third person- close- and present tense. These alone are not easy tasks to pull off. Then there are those long and greatly punctuated sentences that would grind on the nerves of the OCD driven punctuation people at a certain forum I will leave unnamed here. Charles pulls this all off well. I would almost guess he might be thumbing his nose at these forums that are trying to spit out cookie cutter writers. All of them clones of the churlish administrator who is still learning to write. And this is where I can see that a few people might not like this book. Not because it is not written well or that it is full of geek-speak but because it doesn't conform to what the majority of books are that are spit out by the presses of the large publishing houses. Sure there might be some Science in this story that is suspect. It is after all science fiction and the best of them that have started from the most solid what-if have all digressed a bit and wandered off the path. I again think that Charles has done well. Of course there is the notion that these separate stories do not quite congeal together well even though they are about the members of the same dysfunctional family. To that I say we missed a larger point. These are not just the story of Manfred Macx and his wives and children and grandchildren. This is the story of the birth of an AI (catlike) and its growth into something that transcends its creator. *Possible spoiler------------------------------------------------- This is Aineko's story- Aineko is there all the way through the whole story. Right to the end. And I'll admit that its hard to empathize with Aineko but that might be because it's not really human. J.L. Dobias

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