Luminous (book)

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Luminous
First edition cover
AuthorGreg Egan
PublisherMillennium
Publication date
1998
ISBN1-85798-573-7
823/.914
LC ClassPR9619.3.E35 L86 1999

Luminous is a collection of short science fiction stories by Greg Egan first published in 1998 by Millenium.[1]

Contents[edit]

Luminous contains the following short stories:

  • "Chaff" — An agent is sent to kill a geneticist who is working in a drug lord-controlled stronghold in the jungles of Colombia, and working on important brain-altering research.
  • "Mitochondrial Eve" — An organisation is trying to trace a common maternal ancestor for recent humanity.
  • "Luminous" — A pair of researchers find a defect in mathematics, where an assertion (X) leads to a contradictory assertion (not X) after a long but finite series of steps. Using a powerful virtual computer made of light beams (Luminous), they are able to map and shape the boundary between the near-side and far-side mathematics, leading to a showdown with real consequences in the physical universe.
  • "Mister Volition"
  • "Cocoon"
  • "Transition Dreams"
  • "Silver Fire"
  • "Reasons to Be Cheerful" — A boy discovers he has a serious brain tumour, which was causing him to be amazingly happy. With it removed, he becomes despondent, and undergoes a new and extensive treatment eventually, with a form of brain network, to try to get back to a more useful life many years later.
  • "Our Lady of Chernobyl" — A man is hired to find a radioactive religious icon. The search turns deadly.
  • "The Planck Dive"

Critical reception[edit]

Writing in Vector Brian Stableford noted: "Egan's second story-collection, Luminous, is markedly better than his first. Axiomatic, and warrants comparison with such classic collections of Contes philosophiques as Jorge Luis Borges's Labyrinths and Primo Levi's The Sixth Day...This is the science fiction book of the year, and it should be on every sf lover's shelf...For good or ill, this is the shape of things to come."[2]

In SF Commentary Bruce Gillespie noted: "Greg Egan has achieved an evenness of texture and consistency of accomplishment in these stories that makes it difficult to remember them separately. They so nearly add up to one Eganworld that it’s hard to differentiate between their viewpoints. I’ve given four stars to most of them, and particularly liked 'Transition Dreams', 'Silver Fire', 'Chaff', and "The Planck Dive"."[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "'Luminous by Greg Egan". ISFDB. Retrieved 1 June 2024.
  2. ^ ""Greg Egan – Luminous"" (PDF). Vector 203, January/February 1999, p24. Retrieved 1 June 2024.
  3. ^ ""Luminous by Greg Egan"" (PDF). SF Commentary 80A, August 2010, p64. Retrieved 1 June 2024.