Freeware

Fiction

Author: Rudy Rucker

Tom Robbins meets William Gibson in this futuristic romp. Moldies, artificial life-forms that are soft and changeable, have drastically altered Earth. At the same time, the loonies have colonized the Moon for their own use–a vast place of lab experiments and communes. So when an alien accidentally lands on a Moon spaceport, no one can save humanity from itself except the….Read More

5 Books Similar to Freeware

Software

Cobb Anderson created the "boppers," sentient robots that overthrew their human overlords. But now Cobb is just an aging alcoholic waiting to die, and the big boppers are threatening to… Continue Reading Posted in: Fiction, Science Fiction

Mirrorshades: The Cyberpunk Anthology

With their hard-edged, street-wise prose, they created frighteningly probable futures of high-tech societies and low-life hustlers. Fans and critics call their world cyberpunk. Here is the definitive "cyberpunk" short fiction… Continue Reading Posted in: 1945, American, American Writers, Literary Collections, Science Fiction, Science Fiction Short Stories, Short Stories Anthologies

Realware

This hilarious finale to the award-winning series offers more cutting-edge science, raucous social satire and deeply informed speculations from "one of science fiction's wittiest writers" (San Francisco Chronicle) Continue Reading Posted in: Fiction, Science Fiction

The Hacker and the Ants

Revered as one of the Godfathers of the "Cyberpunk" literary movement, author Rudy Rucker is an American original - a seriously daffy sf innovator whose irrepressible imagination truly knows no… Continue Reading Posted in: Artificial Intelligence, Computer Viruses, Cyberpunk Science Fiction, Hard Science Fiction

Gnarl!

Though he is also a mathematician, computer scientist, and essayist, Rudy Rucker is best known for his ground-breaking science fiction. The companion volume to Seek!, Rucker's selected nonfiction, Gnarl! brings… Continue Reading Posted in: American, Science Fiction, Science Fiction Short Stories, Short Stories

Leave a Reply