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An Isaac Asimov Robot Mystery: Mirage
 
 

An Isaac Asimov Robot Mystery: Mirage (Paperback)

by Mark Tiederman (Author) "Mia Daventri listened to the stream of com chatter in her left ear and surveyed the crowd gathered at archway ..." (more)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Mark W. Tiedemann has a reputation for psychologically complex and strongly plotted short fiction (see, for example, his contributions to Vanishing Acts and Sirens and Other Daemon Lovers). He uses these traits to great effect in his first novel, a robot mystery set in the world created by the late Isaac Asimov. In a future where humankind is divided into three broad coalitions--Earther, Spacer, and Settler--positronic robots are governed by the three laws of robotics, designed to make it impossible for them to harm a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human to come to harm. However, positronic robots are outlawed on Earth.

The book opens as a Spacer delegation arrives on Earth to negotiate the repeal of the antirobot laws. Special Agent Mia Daventri is assigned to security for the Earther negotiating team, along with a specially modified robot, Bogard, the only one of its kind on the planet. Neither human nor robot is able to prevent what happens next, something that should have been impossible: the public massacre of both negotiating parties. Mia survives the assassination, thanks in part to Bogard--who does not act according to design specifications--but her life is still in danger. Bogard and Mia join forces with returning franchise characters Derec Avery and Ariel Burgess to unravel the corporate and political conspiracy behind the slaughter of the diplomats.

Dialogue and plot are crisp and tight, and the characters are distinct and multilayered. This is superior franchise fiction, designed for adults with a taste for mystery and rigorous logic. An ambiguous ending hints at future installments. --Luc Duplessis



Product Description

At a conference uniting the Spacers, the Settlers, and representatives of Earth, the senator of Earth and senior space ambassador of Aurora are advocating the restoration of positronic robots on Earth, repudiating years of fear and resentment. It is a dangerous stance to take.

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4.3 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Surprisingly Good Addition, Jan 31 2003
By A Customer
I read Mark Tiedemann's COMPASS REACH and was blown away by his ability to do terrific characterization in the context of a full-blown space adventure. I was almost disappointed to discover that he had written books in someone else's universe, but I gave MIRAGE a shot and I'm glad I did! All his strengths are here, breathing life into what I'd come to see as a dry, been-there-done-that franchise. Proves that a good idea can always be done a bit better if a good writer is given a chance to reimagine the whole thing.

MIRAGE is an espionage thriller that toys with a frankenstein idea. When the climax comes, teh possibility of a really cliche ending is avoided by following logic--like Asimov would have done!--and sticking to the possibilities in the characters themselves.

Great characters (he even made Derec Avery and Ariel Burgess more interesting!) and a great plot, with impressive speculation to boot. What more can you want from a science fiction novel?

Tiedemann's "original" novels are better, but MIRAGE turned out to be a really good introduction to a fine writer. FIVE STARS!

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3.0 out of 5 stars Mirage: Fails to Excite, Dec 14 2002
By Martin Asiner (jersey city, nj United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
When a prolific and profitable author like Isaac Asimov dies, his publishers do not believe that his death ought to mark the end of the publishing gravy train. After Asimov's death, his Foundation and Robot universes were novelized again by several writers, most notably David Brin, Gregory Benford, Roger MacBride Allen, and now most recently with Mark Tiedemann with MIRAGE. It is not overly difficult to duplicate the style of Asimov; it is his substance that remains elusive. Tiedemann writes of the robotic future of earth that had not yet morphed into a galactic empire. This empire is staunchly anti-robotic, with much opposition coming from decadent Spacer worlds that require robots to maintain their own self-loathing existences. On earth, a number of humans and Spacers are assassinated by unknown assailants, throwing into jeopardy a major treaty between earth and the Spacer worlds. The problem with Tiedemann is that his characters speak with the Asimovian twang but lack its inner emotional resonance. Tiedemann seems unclear as to who his protagonist should be. Instead he divides center stage between Special Agent Mia Daventri and roboticist Derec Avery, neither of whom is sufficiently interesting to involve the reader. Nowhere in MIRAGE does Tiedemann cause the reader to care about an increasingly volatile symbiotic relationship between man and robot. Roger MacBride Allen was far more successfull in his trilogy of Asimov inspired robot novels. If the reader wants to get further involved in a post Asimovian universe of conflict between man and robot, then this reader has little choice but to hope that writers like Tiedemann learn their craft well enough to make him care about how humans interact with both altered humans and robots. The real test of any novel lies in its ability to cause the reader to think of it long after he closes the flyleaf. Sadly, MIRAGE failed to deliver.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Very re-freshing, Jun 3 2002
By mike bracuti (Waldwick, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
I gave up the ROBOTS series when I was younger, because I felt the material had gotten stale. Same old philosophies were being re-hashed. But after two or three passes, I picked MIRAGE and CHIMERA up at my bookstore.

I couldn't have been more pleased! Not only were the setting and characters tangible, but the presentation of the technology was both believable and imaginative!

If you are (or were) a fan of Asimovs ROBOT series, these two books will re-ignite the passion.

Buy these books!!

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Really pretty good.
Mirage is a very good start at the latest trilogy within Issac Asimov's universe of spacers, settlers and robots. Read more
Published on Mar 15 2002 by Jason

3.0 out of 5 stars a bit to ambiguous, still it has some good spells
Mark W. Tiedemann's Mirage is a fairly complex SF novel. Corporate and political conspiracy behind the slaughter of diplomats for the advancement of some hidden agenda. Read more
Published on Feb 4 2001 by Simon Laub

4.0 out of 5 stars Punches pulled
This book was an enjoyable, engrossing read. Derek and Ariel fit the story nearly perfectly, esp. for anyone who has read the Robot City novels. Read more
Published on Oct 9 2000 by cprise

5.0 out of 5 stars Science Fiction at its Best!
This is a great piece of Science Fiction! It is a clearly written mystery, with a real plot that doesn't just serve as the method of introducing the author's views of the... Read more
Published on Aug 15 2000 by F. Lybrand

4.0 out of 5 stars Yet Another Robot Novel...
The Asimov universe has been respectfully added to since his untimely death - first there were the Robot City novels, then came the new Robot novels by Allen and then the Second... Read more
Published on April 24 2000 by Chris MB

5.0 out of 5 stars SF in the old and new tradition
Mirage is a great hommage to the golden days of SF but with a modern sensibility. Fast-moving plot and faithful to Asimov's three laws. Read more
Published on April 7 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars respectful of asimov's style and sbustance
a new robot mystery that respects Asimov's three laws of robotics and then succeeds as sf...Tiedemann fulfills his short works' appeal with this amazing first full-length effort
Published on April 3 2000

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