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Legacy
 
 

Legacy (Paperback)

by Greg Bear (Author) "I stood on the lip of the southern borehole, clutching a service line, and, for the first time in my life, stared beyond the mass..." (more)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Hard science and human interest intersect ingeniously in this prequel to Bear's Eon (1987) and Eternity (1988). Twenty-five years after the opening of The Way, a kind of tunnel through space that permits access to different planets and time continua, Olmy Ap Sennon is sent through it to spy on 4000 "divaricates" who fled the starship Thistledown for a utopian existence on the sylvan world of Lamarckia. What he finds, instead, is a full-blown divaricate civil war, whose opposing sides mirror his own ambivalent feelings about life aboard the strictly regimented starship. Olmy and the divaricates work through their respective identity crises against the exuberantly imagined backdrop of Lamarckia, a planet whose integrated ecosystem adapts readily to change. While occasionally numbing in their detail, Bear's meticulous descriptions of flora and fauna serve an important function: they authenticate Lamarckia as a world that assimilates and learns from other organisms, making it the perfect crucible for examining the personal and political dramas staged within it. This is a stunning SF novel that extrapolates a scientifically complex future from the basic stuff of human nature.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Booklist

In Legacy's predecessor, Eon (1985), part of Earth's population escaped a nuclear war by traveling through time along a path called the Way. As the sequel commences, the Way has been in use for some time, and dissidents have found ways to drop out more thoroughly than any 1960s hippie ever did. One such dropped-out group consists of 4,000 antitechnological Naderites, to whom a troubleshooter named Olmy is dispatched. He finds them on a settled, Earthlike world and their society taking a host of radically different directions, all of which Bear works out with his accustomed literacy, scientific accuracy, and deft characterization. As much an exercise in world building and social experimentation as a conventional story, the novel will not disappoint Eon's fans and, since Bear really keeps it moving, stands well enough to be read on its own. Roland Green --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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I stood on the lip of the southern borehole, clutching a service line, and, for the first time in my life, stared beyond the mass of Thistledown at the stars. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars Misleading, Dec 6 2003
By "hairless_ape2000" (Rural PA, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Legacy (Mass Market Paperback)
I am a huge Bear fan-but this book reminds me of Orson Scott Card milking his Enders Game success ad nauseaum.
The most charitable explanation I can think of is that Bear didn't even write this book-perhaps it is ghost written. The connection to EON and ETERNITY is laughable.
If you are in the mood for an Edgar Rice Burroughs style Tarzan novel from the 30's -you might find this interesting.
I wouldn't have minded this too much if Bear had been honest about this book and not tried to connect it to EON/ETERNITY. It might have worked as a stand alone fantasy adventure. Hardcore science fiction-this is not. Its going rate of 40 cents on the used list is a good gauge of the value of this book. If I could get my money back-I would.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Davey Jones and some wierd plantlike things, April 21 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Legacy (Mass Market Paperback)
While I was able to make it thru the entire book, I'm thankful that I didn't spend hard cash on it, and instead checked it out of a library.

The story of Olmy started out in a very good way, in a nice hard-style sci-fi environment that started to grab my imagination. But that changed once he came to Lamarckia via the Way. After that, I could have been reading a sappy hard-life novel of some people in some jungle somewhere, with a major sea travel thrown in. I didn't care about the secondary characters in the story, I didn't care about the had times on board a sailboat, and I didn't care about the large plant-like creature, who was the only interesting point about the story apart from the Way and the technological environment from where the story began.
Through the entire book I was expecting some sort of discovery of some sort of large-scale ecologic intelligence, (like Jerry Pournelle's STARSWARM) but there's no payoffs for all of your determined reading. Things are vaguely explained, hinted at, and in the end I realized that there was just no substance to the mystetries that Mr. Bear tried to hook me with.

Here's a paraphrase of the entire book:

Some guy from a very interesting place goes on a vague mission of discovery to a very wierd place. There, he becomes part of the hard-knock life. Eventually he falls in love with a girl because she's "simple" while working as a deck-hand on a sailing ship. while sailing they see wierd things and suffer more hardships. Then a war happens with small numbers of people using primitive cannons and other weapons, then he's rescued somehow and is back in the interesting place talking about his experience.

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2.0 out of 5 stars Davey Jones goes to plant world, April 21 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Legacy (Mass Market Paperback)
While I was able to make it thru the entire book, I'm thankful that I didn't spend hard cash on it, and instead checked it out of a library.

The story of Olmy started out in a very good way, in a nice hard-style sci-fi environment that started to grab my imagination. But that changed once he came to Lamarckia via the Way. After that, I could have been reading a sappy hard-life novel of some people in some jungle somewhere, with a major sea travel thrown in. I didn't care about the secondary characters in the story, I didn't care about the had times on board a sailboat, and I didn't care about the large plant-like creature, who was the only interesting point about the story apart from the Way and the technological environment from where the story began.

Through the entire book I was expecting some sort of discovery of some sort of large-scale ecologic intelligence, (like Jerry Pournelle's STARSWARM) but there's no payoffs for all of your determined reading. Things are vaguely explained, hinted at, and in the end I realized that there was just no substance to the mystetries that Mr. Bear tried to hook me with.

Here's a paraphrase of the entire book:

Some guy from a very interesting place goes on a vague mission of discovery to a very wierd place. There, he becomes part of the hard-knock life. Eventually he falls in love with a girl because she's "simple" while working as a deck-hand on a sailing ship. while sailing they see wierd things and suffer more hardships. Then a war happens with small numbers of people using primitive cannons and other weapons, then he's rescued somehow and is back in the interesting place talking about his experience.

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Most recent customer reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Gives Eon and Eternity a bad name
While he gets high marks for imagination about this planet with a thinking landmass/bioshpere, his storyline and his characters just don't cut it. Read more
Published on Mar 3 2003 by mobiusklien

3.0 out of 5 stars Average
Greg Bear creates a very fascinating world, but he doesn't go anywhere with it. The main character's very vague mission is to study the planet and the society that develops there... Read more
Published on May 21 2001 by Steve C. Yabut

4.0 out of 5 stars Legacy not quite up to standards of EON and ETERNITY
I have read almost all of Greg Bear's books and loved EON and ETERNITY as well as THE FORGE OF GOD and ANVIL OF STARS. Read more
Published on Jan 4 2000 by Michael A. Shaw

5.0 out of 5 stars Legacy
I purchased "Legacy" mainly because I had read Eon and Eternity...and was hoping for a book that would give me the good stuff that Bear is capable of and didn't fully... Read more
Published on Nov 27 1999 by mandark

5.0 out of 5 stars I loved the book. Not really connected to Eon.
Or at least the connection to Eon is superflous and not at all necessary for the telling of this story.

I loved the book. Read more

Published on Oct 4 1999

4.0 out of 5 stars Greg Bear's enduring Legacy of fine writing
When I first started reading Legacy I was a little disappointed, as I had expected it to be a straight sequel to Eon and Eternity, and had wanted to learn more about the Jarts... Read more
Published on April 12 1999 by Alex.Cull@tesco.net

4.0 out of 5 stars Tied to the Eon universe but could easily stand on it's own.
Bear links the Legacy story to the Eon universe but takes you away from the most fascinating aspect of it, "The Way". Read more
Published on Mar 23 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars May be one of the best SF pieces of literature ever written
Greg Bear fashions a unique world complete with utterly believable people. His character building is especially noteworthy. Read more
Published on Jul 8 1998

4.0 out of 5 stars Very rich novel in the Asimovian "world-building" tradition
I purchased this book because it was advertised to be a prequel to Eon, which I thoroughly enjoyed. In fact, the link to Eon is contrived, at best; however, as a standalone... Read more
Published on May 18 1998

5.0 out of 5 stars One of his best...
Bear has the ability to transport you to a world where humans are just minor and insignificant. Opening one of portals along the Way, the devaricates find themselves escaping... Read more
Published on Jul 24 1997

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