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My Name Is Legion
 
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My Name Is Legion [Mass Market Paperback]

Roger Zelazny
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Hardcover --  
Paperback CDN $4.31  
Mass Market Paperback --  
Mass Market Paperback, Mar 12 1981 --  

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Product Description

Product Description

He had destroyed his punchcards and changed his face. There was no credit card, birth record, or passport for him in the International Data Bank. His names were many...any he chose. His occupation was taking megarisks in the service of a vast global detective agency. His interworld assignments were highly lucrative, incalculably vital, and terrifyingly deadly. And more often then not, his life was a living hell!

Ingram

In the employ of a vast global detective agency, a nameless agent moves from interworld assignment to interworld assignment, making money and taking risks. Reissue.

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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars One of Zelazny's "lighter" books, Mar 23 2000
By 
Ken Coar "Rodent of Unusual Size" (in 1.0 AU Solar orbit) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Ce commentaire est de: My Name Is Legion (Mass Market Paperback)
Roger Zelazny is one of my favourite authors, and this is one of my favourites of his work. Thought-provoking but not too much so, with reasonably fast-paced action and moderate depth.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A futuristic spy story in 3 acts., Jan 24 1997
By A Customer
Ce commentaire est de: My Name Is Legion (Mass Market Paperback)
In an era in which everithing is under computer control
you meet a spy, which accoplishes "dirty" jobs for
the authorities.
This is only the beginning, and it goes on with Zealzny's
style: suggestive ambeintations, characters nicely
portraited and a lot of passages which force you to think.
A good reading, for SF lovers.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.3 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars want to quit the system?, Jun 4 2000
By Craig Chalquist, PhD, author of TERRAPSYCHOLO... - Published on Amazon.com
Ce commentaire est de: MY NAME IS LEGION (Mass Market Paperback)
You're a computer employee hooking up every network on earth to fashion the International Data Bank--only to realize it will become the ultimate invasion of human privacy. What will you do? Something creative, invisible, and dangerous... this book was written decades before the Internet got going.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars 3 Stories, quality varies, Mar 8 2003
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Ce commentaire est de: MY NAME IS LEGION (Mass Market Paperback)
This book is made up of the three novella's published elsewhere. They all involve an unnamed protagonist who has no record of his existence. The first one, "The Eve of Rumoko" is an entertaining suspense story which introduces us to the hero and gives us a thrilling plot without sacrficing style or depth of character. The second, "Kjawlll'kje'k'koothai'lll'kjr'k," is by far the weakest of the stories a not very intriguing mystery not really comparable to the other two. However "Home is the Hangman," the third story is excellent despite it's B-moviesh plot (killer robot from outer space). Zelazny manages to use this set to explore the nature of the human psyche while being thrilling and exciting at the same time.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars A spy story with no messages that I could puzzle out!, July 8 2008
By Paul Weiss - Published on Amazon.com
Ce commentaire est de: MY NAME IS LEGION (Mass Market Paperback)
I don't mind admitting it! "My Name is Legion" is a bit of a puzzle for me. I haven't been able to decide if there was a message of some kind that I missed or whether Zelazny was just having fun writing a few short stories in a spy vs spy mode built around a character with no name.

Nobody who has read science fiction is under any illusion about the loss of privacy we are suffering with the advent of the internet, computerized databases and national identification programs. Long before any of that came along, Zelazny prepared a story about a murky hero (or is it anti-hero) who managed to destroy his punch cards (what does that tell you about how long ago this story was written?), eliminate his credit cards, destroy his birth records and passport and simply drop out of society and into the mists of living by his wits taking on mercenary government jobs from time to time under different aliases for every case.

"My Name is Legion" is actually a collection of three novellas separately written and related to one another only to the extent that the man with no name is the hero in each of the stories.

The first in the collection, "Rumoko" revolves around the rather frightening prospect of the use of nuclear bombs blasting a hole in the Moho layer to create artificial volcanoes. The idea is to release magma to create artificial land surface which can then be made habitable in an attempt to deal with earth's apparent population problem. Some pretty exciting stuff for those sci-fi lovers that like their plots hard and tech-oriented!

The second story (with a title that is quite unpronounceable) moves to the far opposite end of the hard-soft sci-fi spectrum - we're talking here about the sentience of dolphins; whether they dream, compose music or are capable of murder; and even whether they have a concept of philosophy and religion!

The third and final story in the collection, "Home is the Hangman", was, in my opinion, the most interesting story of the three. Dealing with artificial intelligence and robotics, it broached that always interesting subject of a robot's possible self-awareness, whether it could be capable of murder and whether it could feel emotion of any kind. Unlike the rather pretentious feel of the philosophy in the central dolphin story, Zelazny's use of Gödel's unprovability theorems and Turing's Test for artificial intelligence made "Home for the Hangman" a much more convincing story. I suspect that Asimov who virtually made a career out of writing about robotic behaviour would agree.

Three stars for "Rumoko", two stars only for "Kjawlll'kje'k'koothai'lll'kjr'k", and four stars for "Home is the Hangman". Overall rating averaged out at three stars.

Recommended.

Paul Weiss
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 7 reviews  4.3 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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