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Memory of Earth

#1 Homecoming

Orson Scott Card

$66.95   $57.14

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English
Orbit Books
03 March 1999
Series: Homecoming
The planet called Harmony had been settled by humans nearly forty years before. The colony had been placed under the care of an artificial intelligence, the Oversoul, high in orbit. This master computer had one overriding command: guard the people of Harmony.

But now the Oversoul is itself in danger. Soon, within a thousand years, catastrophic war will break out on Harmony unless the Oversoul can be repaired. The master computer has determined that it must be taken back to lost Earth; someone on Harmony must be given back the knowledge of space travel in order to save the planet from destruction. For one family, about to be caught up in an approaching civil war, life will change for ever.

More information on this book and others can be found on the Orbit website at www.orbitbooks.co.uk
By:  
Imprint:   Orbit Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Volume:   1
Dimensions:   Height: 129mm,  Width: 187mm,  Spine: 21mm
Weight:   170g
ISBN:   9781857236965
ISBN 10:   1857236963
Series:   Homecoming
Pages:   320
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Other merchandise
Publisher's Status:   Unknown

Orson Scott Card is the award-winning author of the Ender saga, the Alvin Maker series and the Homecoming series. He lives with his wife and three children in the US.

Reviews for Memory of Earth (#1 Homecoming)

First of a five-book series from the author of Xenocide, the Alvin Maker tales, etc. Planet Harmony, settled 40 million years ago following the destruction of Earth, is overseen by the Oversoul, an intelligent computer able to communicate telepathically with certain of the inhabitants. Set up to prevent war and ensure the colony's survival, the Oversoul is now breaking down, and for repairs must journey to Earth (where, the Oversoul theorizes, a new civilization surely will have arisen by now). Needing help from Harmony, the Oversoul first contacts young student Nafai of the matriarchal city Basilica, hoping to persuade him and others of his family to secure the Index - an ancient machine that will enable the Oversoul to talk directly with everyone. A major complication is that as the Oversoul decays, the mental blocks it implanted in Harmony's people eons ago to prevent war are also breaking down; and soon the women of Basilica find themselves trapped in a power struggle between two hostile male armies. Where Card focuses on children - as he often does here - he writes fluently and persuasively. Elsewhere, his adult characters and motivations are much less appealing. Neither is the ancient-computer backdrop, with its far-fetched Earth connection, particularly convincing. All in all, an uneven and irritatingly inconclusive starter. (Kirkus Reviews)


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