Home :: Books :: Science Fiction & Fantasy  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy

Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Berserker

Berserker

List Price: $2.75
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: original and fast-paced storytelling....
Review: ....of a time when humanity fights to the death with Berserkers, the automated killing machines left from some ancient interstellar war. Exciting short stories with interesting plots...and characters true to this alien telepath's remark about us:

"Under this burden some men became like brutes, and the minds of others grew to be as terrible and implacable as the machines they fought against. But I have touched a few rare human minds, the jewels of life, who rise to meet the greatest challenges by becoming supremely men."

Long live Johann Karlsen!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Berserkers are monstrous machines (think death star)
Review: A very easy and enjoyable read. Berserker is actually a collection of loosely chronological vignettes about the first parts of the Berserker wars. The Berserkers are monstrous machines (think death star) from some ancient unknown race, who's sole goal is to destroy life. When the Berserkers reach the arm of the galaxy populated by man, life fights back. The first is a fairly large, non-chronological series. Saberhagan's web page says the rest can be read in any order, but read Berserker first...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Quite excellent
Review: Berserker is a true classic. The theme of humanity fighting machines has been used many different times: in the fiction of Gregory Benford and Greg Bear; in television shows like Star Trek; and in movies like the Matrix and the Terminator. It is refreshing to read one of the earliest versions of this story because Saberhagen's writing - which was doubtlessly an inspiration to others pursuing similar stories - remains distinct and his stories unique.

The structure of this Berserker book is a bit loose - it has perhaps 10 stories bracketed by the narration of an alien historian (whose introduction to the book is one of its finest parts). This narration has an intentionally Homeric effect - Saberhagen clearly had Greek epics in mind. Some of his characters recall figures in Greek mythology: the stoic Johann Karlsen, the vengeful Hemphill, and the vain Felipe Nogara.

The stories themselves are very well-crafted. Saberhagen applies an admirable minimalism when writing, though at times he will indulge in descriptive prose (most notably in the excellent final story). Humanity is depicted with both its flaws and virtues, as the struggle against the Berserkers brings out the best and worst in us.

Other reviewers disliked the loose structure - I rather liked it. Novels can often tightly confine their worlds and limit them. These somewhat connected stories hint at a much larger and grander story arc with all manners of other untold stories.

Finally, if you stumble on the audio edition of this, I would strongly recommend it. The narrator who handles the Campan historian is excellent; the second narrators rendition of the voices of Berserkers is truly chilling.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Quite excellent
Review: Berserker is a true classic. The theme of humanity fighting machines has been used many different times: in the fiction of Gregory Benford and Greg Bear; in television shows like Star Trek; and in movies like the Matrix and the Terminator. It is refreshing to read one of the earliest versions of this story because Saberhagen's writing - which was doubtlessly an inspiration to others pursuing similar stories - remains distinct and his stories unique.

The structure of this Berserker book is a bit loose - it has perhaps 10 stories bracketed by the narration of an alien historian (whose introduction to the book is one of its finest parts). This narration has an intentionally Homeric effect - Saberhagen clearly had Greek epics in mind. Some of his characters recall figures in Greek mythology: the stoic Johann Karlsen, the vengeful Hemphill, and the vain Felipe Nogara.

The stories themselves are very well-crafted. Saberhagen applies an admirable minimalism when writing, though at times he will indulge in descriptive prose (most notably in the excellent final story). Humanity is depicted with both its flaws and virtues, as the struggle against the Berserkers brings out the best and worst in us.

Other reviewers disliked the loose structure - I rather liked it. Novels can often tightly confine their worlds and limit them. These somewhat connected stories hint at a much larger and grander story arc with all manners of other untold stories.

Finally, if you stumble on the audio edition of this, I would strongly recommend it. The narrator who handles the Campan historian is excellent; the second narrators rendition of the voices of Berserkers is truly chilling.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: not bad
Review: Berserker is one of the better science fiction novels that I've read in recent years. It deals with a futuristic war between humans and gigantic starships named berserkers, whose orgins are not revealed in this volume. While the plot may sound like a cliche, the writing is crisp and original.

The best part of the novel is the lengthy chapter in the middle that covers the climactic battle between humanity and the berserkers. It's a scene of high suspense and excellent descriptions of the action. Afterwards, there are several chapters pertaining to other incidents that are only loosely connected to the main storyline. These chapters aren't quite as entertaining, and some of them are downright silly. It would have been nice if the author had stuck to just one single plotline. Even so, the overall book is highly original and well worth reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A direct ancestor to Star Trek's Borg and the Matrix
Review: Fred Saberhagen, in the first book of the Berserker series, introduces us to an unstoppable enemy to whom life itself is irrelevant. This collection of stories on a common theme predates the Terminator, the Borg and the Matrix by at least 30 years, and presents the idea of man's triumph over machines in a high-energy format which borders on the positive side of the classic pulp magazines. If you REALLY want to see the man vs. machine conflict dealt with in an original way, get this book NOW.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A direct ancestor to Star Trek's Borg and the Matrix
Review: Fred Saberhagen, in the first book of the Berserker series, introduces us to an unstoppable enemy to whom life itself is irrelevant. This collection of stories on a common theme predates the Terminator, the Borg and the Matrix by at least 30 years, and presents the idea of man's triumph over machines in a high-energy format which borders on the positive side of the classic pulp magazines. If you REALLY want to see the man vs. machine conflict dealt with in an original way, get this book NOW.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Mutually Assured Destruction on a cosmic scale
Review: If, somewhere in this universe two interstellar enemies assumed the trait humanity demonstrated during the 20th Century, took 'I'd rather be dead than Red' to the ultimate logical extreme, killed one another off entirely after having set their killing machines on autopilot, just to make certain, you'd have the 'other side' in the Berserkers series. Mankind innocently encounters the machines somewhere in his future and finds himself at war with them.

This series appears on the surface to be a relatively simple, fairly shallow-but-entertaining set of stories. Maybe that's the way it was intended. But if you scrape off the surface and consider the implications I believe you'll appreciated it more.

This book and all those in the Berserker series are worth reading for their intertainment value. If you pause afterward and ponder what the author might have been saying about humanity, so much the better.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent, diverse, clever, and very original.
Review: This is book is well ahead of it's time. The author's writing style is original, and refreshing. If you like sci-fi but are dissapointed with the lack of depth of most sci-fi novels this is the book for you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is a must-read for Sci-Fi fans.
Review: This week I read "Berserker" by Fred Saberhagen. If you are a "Star Wars" fan, you will hate this book. Originally written in 1967, it contains most of the plots that George Lucas "adapted" for his well-known movies. What Lucas didn't manage to capture was Saberhagen's direct, no-nonsense style. His ideas are unique and fresh, even after all these years.

The big thing he does that many sci-fi authors fail to do is he creates believable technology that withstands the march of time. I think the key is: he doesn't explain _how_ the technology works, just _what_ it does. I plan to continue reading works by this author until I have read them all, and then start over again.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates