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The Ouroboros Wave
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The Ouroboros Wave

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Description:

L to R (Western Style). Ninety years from now, a satellite detects a nearby black hole scientists dub Kali for the Hindu goddess of destruction. Humanity embarks on a generations-long project to tap the energy of the black hole, and found colonies on planets across the solar system. Earth and Mars and the moons Europa (Jupiter) and Titan (Uranus) develop radically different societies, with only Kali, that swirling vortex of destruction and creation, and the hated but crucial Artificial Accretion Disk Development association (AADD) in common.

Product Details:
Author: jyouji Hayashi
Paperback: 350 pages
Publisher: VIZ Media LLC
Publication Date: November 16, 2010
Language: English
ISBN: 1421536455
Product Length: 7.9 inches
Product Width: 5.2 inches
Product Height: 0.9 inches
Product Weight: 0.55 pounds
Package Length: 7.8 inches
Package Width: 5.2 inches
Package Height: 0.9 inches
Package Weight: 0.8 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 4 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 3.0 ( 4 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

4A solid, enjoyable hard-sf novelDec 30, 2010
By Marc Mckenzie
Ever since I read the blurb for it, I've been interested in this book. When I finally read it, I wasn't disappointed. It's a great "hard" science fiction novel. Actually it is a series of stories that relate to the discovery of a black hole in our solar system and the decades-long project undertaken to harness its power.

This is a novel that will appeal to fans of Stephen Baxter, Greg Bear, Charles Sheffield, and other major Western hard science fiction writers. Jim Hubbert's translation is quite good, and of course, credit must go to Jyouji Hayashi as the author. If anything, THE OUROBOROS WAVE is proof that great science fiction is not limited to the West, and that there is a treasure trove of amazing SF writing coming from the land of the Rising Sun.

I enjoyed this book, and highly recommend it.

4Classic SF modeled on Asimov, HeinleinJun 21, 2011
By Paul J. Hebert "another reader"
Ouroboros Wave is a fine SF novel centered on the discovery of a small black hole near to our solar system some 90 years from now, and the efforts of mankind and the mysterious AADD group to harness its power over the next several decades despite a background of Terran assassination and treachery.

Chock full of fairly reasonable orbital engineering (with diagrams!), space habitats and stellar physics, Jyouji Hayashi borrows the connected story structure of Asimov's "I, Robot" to plot the progress of the Artificial Accretion Disk Department toward capturing the potential energy of the black hole Kali for our entire solar system, creating a new extra-Terran society in the process and preparing for eventual manned interstellar travel. The novel ends with the first such maiden (and highly illegal) voyage. Hayashi is planning a larger series of which this is the beginning novel, teasing the reader with the possible discovery of interstellar intelligences using gravity waves for directed communication and a discovery regarding the black hole Kali itself that may harbor more than just a quantum singularity.

Hayashi looks to the future of mankind in interstellar space by examining the beginning of that journey in a manner reminiscent of Heinlein's best "hard SF" novels. The translation by Jim Hubbert smoothly takes us into Hayashi's stories of the future early history of interstellar humanity.

Very good read, if not for the physics-squeamish; I am hoping for more from this author.

3Strong science, weak fictionJan 19, 2011
By Keris Nine
The biographical information describes Jyouji Hayashi's forte as "scientific speculation and sociological investigations", and I'd say they got that about right. When it comes to asking questions such as what it means to be human, how you define intelligence (and artificial and extra-terrestrial intelligence) and how communication between different intelligences can give rise to difficulties and conflict, Hayashi comes up with some interesting hard science-fiction concepts. When it comes to normal human interaction and writing convincing dialogue however, the writer is on less solid ground.

The Ouroboros Wave consequently is not a novel in the conventional sense, since there's little indication that the author is capable of creating characters or settings within a normal narrative or dramatic arc. Rather, the book is a collection of shorter stories, all linked together by a central idea. Opening in the year 2123, the discovery of a black hole named Kali heading towards the sun has led to Terrans and other off-world colonists to develop a structure around it, known as Ouroboros, as part of a larger planned station to drag the black hole into orbit around Uranus. The intention is to use Kali as a powerful energy source to extend a network across the solar system. Using this premise, the author considers the various problems that the scientists and societies that build up around it are likely to encounter, and finds solutions.

And unfortunately, unless you like your science-fiction really hard, that really sums up the whole principle by which The Ouroboros Wave operates - the author thinks of problems, and just as quickly solves them. In the first story, for example, the gap between human and artificial intelligence and how they communicate is considered when the AI controlling the structure starts behaving strangely. Inevitably, one thinks of 2001: A Space Odyssey, and the comparison does Hayashi's superficial treatment no favours. In the second story, a group of scientists attempt to explain why an asteroid they hope to use for energy transmission has started to rotate. They do experiments and scans and come up with an explanation. Problem is swiftly followed by solution, with little dramatic tension created.

The third story promises a little more action when, recognising that there are likely to be tensions between Earth and off-world colonies, Mars security forces attempt to capture a dangerous assassin who has come to kill the representative of Mars. In reality however, the story is little more than another series of scientific puzzles posed by the Mars environment that both the Guardians and the assassin have to solve ...which they inevitably do, and a little too easily. And so on. The premise is an interesting one, one that is progressively explored from several viewpoints through the various stories in the novel/collection, at least from the hard SF principle of "scientific speculation and sociological investigations" - on a more basic dramatic narrative level, and from the perspective of creating interesting or realistic human characters, The Ouroboros Wave is unfortunately rather lacking.

0 of 1 found the following review helpful:

2Good concept, poor story.Jan 29, 2011
By Jeremy Lunsford
Picked this up to read on a trip I was taking. I liked the setting of a space station built around a black hole, and the first story that I flipped through looked very interesting. The problem was that just as you start to get familiar with the characters, the story is over, and the book jumps forward in time and you have to get familiar with a whole new set of characters. This book is basically just a bunch of short stories, and I frankly only found only one of them to be very interesting.. The concepts and technologies are very interesting, but they are presented in a very dry and boring way..

I wouldn't recommend this book..

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