欢迎来到相识电子书!

标签:科幻

  • 星球大战 绝地少年武士

    作者:裘德・沃森

  • 星球大战 绝地少年武士

    作者:裘德・沃森

    本书讲述了几个世纪以来,如腾和塞那利两个星球形成了一项协议:两个首领的长子长到七岁时要相互交换。这本来是为了促进和平和增进理解,但是现在却使得双方剑拔弩张。如腾王朝的继承人理德王子不想回归自己的星球,他的父王将不择手段地使他返回。奎刚和奥比旺决心要阻止一场流血冲突。这是他们所面临的最严峻的挑战。
  • 星球大战 绝地少年武士

    作者:裘德・沃森

    绝地武士戴尔被害,奎刚·金因失支战友和亦人极度悲愤,为了复仇他单枪匹马追寻凶手,然而这种“人之常情”却不合绝地规矩。奎刚金能否战胜个人情感,维护绝地精神?
  • 星球大战 绝地少年武士

    作者:裘德・沃森

    绝地武士的神殿遭到了攻击。有人想杀死尤达大师。一个危险的入侵者潜入了绝地武士内部。 每个人都有嫌疑。没有人绝对安全。奥比旺·克诺比和奎刚·金必须揭开阴谋……否则就得眼看着神殿从内部被摧毁。
  • 科魔大战

    作者:(美)罗杰·泽拉兹尼

    根据宇宙古老的平衡法则。一个科学的世界产生之后,必然伴随着另一个相对的魔法世界,二者针锋相对,势同水火。 魔法世界中的龙多威君王戴特·奠尔逊想调和科学与魔法,使二者能够并存。却给魔法世界带来了灾难。最后被另一个魔法师摩尔杀死。他的遗婴波尔被送到科学世界中,以此消除他与生俱来的法力。这个世界的婴儿马克则被带回魔法世界。于是。两个婴儿分别在自己不适应的世界中长大。 马克在魔法世界尝试的发明创造使这个世界面临灭顶之灾,惟一的救星就是身处科学世界的波尔。两个分属不同世界的年轻人相遇了。这是一场科学和磨法的决斗……
  • 征服者罗比尔

    作者:儒勒﹒凡尔纳

    十九世纪后期,用比空气重的机器真正解决飞行问题仍是人们的一种设想。但是工程师罗布尔已经秘密制造了“信天翁号”飞行器,并驾机来到费城宣布:只有比空气重的机器才能真正征服天空。他把顽固的“比空气轻主义者”韦尔顿学会的主席和秘书“劫持”到飞行器上,带着他们做环球飞行,在同大自然的各种较量中充分显示了这种飞行器的巨大威力。最后,“比空气轻主义者”们的得意之作“前进号”飞艇与“信天翁号”飞行器较量,不击自破,再次显示了罗布尔的“信天翁号”才是人类征服天空的使者。
  • 阿西莫夫

    作者:(英)米歇尔・怀特

  • 纳拉贝拉星际演出公司

    作者:弗雷德里克・波尔

  • The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy

    作者:Douglas Adams

    A one-volume edition charting Arthur Dent's odyssey through space, comprising: THE HITCH HIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY: One Thursday lunchtime the Earth gets demolished to make way for a hyperspace bypass. For Arthur, who has just had his house demolished, this is too much. Sadly, the weekend's just begun. THE RESTAURANT AT THE END OF THE UNIVERSE: When all issues of space, time, matter and the nature of being are resolved, only one question remains: Where shall we have dinner? The Restaurant at the End of the Universe provides the ultimate gastronomic experience and, for once, there is no morning after. LIFE, THE UNIVERSE AND EVERYTHING: In consequence of a number of stunning catastrophes, Arthur Dent is surprised to find himself living in a hideously miserable cave on prehistoric Earth. And then, just as he thinks that things cannot possibly get any worse, they suddenly do. SO LONG, AND THANKS FOR ALL THE FISH: Arthur Dent's sense of reality is in its dickiest state when he suddenly finds the girl of his dreams. They go in search of God's Final Message and, in a dramatic break with tradition, actually find it.
  • 侏羅紀公園

    作者:迈克尔.克莱顿

    哥斯大黎加某座海島上的侏羅紀公園內,正進行著史無前例的祕密研究。公園內的遺傳學專家成功地從化石及琥珀中萃取出恐龍的染色使絕種近六千五百萬年的恐龍復活了。 某天,正當一群專家學者被邀請至公園內參觀時,所有的電源突然完全中斷。八噸重的巨型恐龍紛紛闖出電網柵欄,眾人陷入重重危機之中,眼看著全島即將發生一場大災難... 長久以來對恐龍的感覺就是---既期待又怕受傷害,總以為牠只是個「神話」,不存在於這個世界;刻板印象是日本酷斯拉深植的。直到「侏儸紀公園」的出現,任憑誰都會永遠既得第一眼看到牠們時的驚艷!我愛看恐龍,而在翻閱「侏儸紀公園」及「失落的世界」兩本電影小說後,我對「恐龍復活」更是抱著矛盾的期望......就讓我們帶著探險的心情一起進入恐龍世界吧!---------中廣新聞網主播兼早安寶島主持人 姚愛真推薦
  • The Lost World

    作者:Michael Crichton

    在线阅读本书 Book Description It is now six years since the secret disaster at Jurassic Park, six years since the extraordinary dream of science and imagination came to a crashing end -- the dinosaurs destroyed, the park dismantled, the island indefinitely closed to the public. There are rumors that something has survived.... Amazon.com Written in the wake of Jurassic Park's phenomenal box-office success, The Lost World seems as much a guidebook for Hollywood types hard at work on the franchise's followup as it is a legitimate sci-fi thriller. Which begs the inevitable questions: Is the plot a rehash of the first book? Sure it is, with the action unfolding on yet another secluded island, the mysterious "Site B." Is the cast of characters basically the same? Absolutely, from a freshly minted pair of cute, compu-savvy kids right down to the neatly exhumed chaos theorist Ian Malcolm (who was presumed dead at the close of JP). But is it fun to read? You betcha. Hollywood (and Michael Crichton) keeps telling us the same old stories for a very good reason: we like them. And the pulp SF formula Crichton has mastered with Jurassic Park and The Lost World is no exception.                               --Paul Hughes From Publishers Weekly One fact about this sequel to Jurassic Park stands out above all: it follows a book that, with spinoffs, including the movie, proved to be the most profitable literary venture ever. So where does the author of a near billion-dollar novel sit? Squarely on the shoulders of his own past work?and Arthur Conan Doyle's. Crichton has borrowed from Conan Doyle before?Rising Sun was Holmes and Watson in Japan?but never so brazenly. The title itself here, the same as that of Conan Doyle's yarn about an equatorial plateau rife with dinos, acknowledges the debt. More enervating are Crichton's self-borrowings: the plot line of this novel reads like an outtake from JP. Instead of bringing his dinos to a city, for instance, Crichton keeps them in the Costa Rican jungle, on an offshore island that was the secret breeding ground for the beasts. Only chaos theoretician Ian Malcolm, among the earlier principals, returns to explore this Lost World, six years after the events of JP; but once again, there's a dynamic paleontologist, a pretty female scientist and two cute kids, boy and girl?the latter even saves the day through clever hacking, just as in JP. Despite stiff prose and brittle characters, Chrichton can still conjure unparalleled dino terror, although the wonder is gone and the attacks are predictable, the pacing perfunctory. But his heart now seems to be not so much in the storytelling as in pedagogy: from start to finish, the novel aims to illustrate Crichton's ideas about extinction?basically, that it occurs because of behavioral rather than environmental changes?and reads like a scientific fable, with pages of theory balancing the hectic action. As science writing, it's a lucid, provocative undertaking; but as an adventure and original entertainment, even though it will sell through the roof, it seems that Crichton has laid a big dinosaur egg. 2,000,000 first printing; BOMC and QPB main selection. From Booklist Every Cretaceous critter in John Hammond's bioengineered dinosaur preserve was destroyed after the events of Jurassic Park. Yet five years later, carcasses of recently dead, supposedly extinct saurians are washing ashore on nearby islands. Time for intrepid scientists to discover and observe again. Onboard this time are the chaos and complexity theorist who almost died in Hammond's folly, a stuck-up rich guy paleontologist, an Amazon of a large-animal ethologist, a regular-guy engineering genius and his assistant, and two computer whiz kids who stow away to join the adults. And, of course, there are venal villains (three) trying to get to the salable goods first (guess what their fate is). Crichton adroitly combines popular scientific colloquy and ripping good, blood-and-guts (literally) action once again. If it all seems rather predictable, remember that the pleasures of familiarity and referentiality rank high among the rewards of popular fiction. Here such pleasures begin with the title, plundered directly from the granddaddy of the modern-day dinosaur romance, Arthur Conan Doyle's Lost World (1912).                               Ray Olson From Library Journal abridgment of Crichton's latest novel, a sequel of sorts to the best-selling Jurassic Park (Knopf, 1990). Ian Malcolm, who supposedly died at the end of Jurassic Park, nonetheless returns to the islands off Costa Rica with a new crew to search for lost worlds of dinosaurs and investigate several theories of extinction. Unfortunately, The Lost World comes up short compared to the intrigue that the extraction, repair, and replication of dinosaur DNA generated for readers and listeners in Jurassic Park. Instead, The Lost World consists mostly of more dinosaurs that chase and sometimes capture Malcolm's cohorts or members of a rival gang led by an unscrupulous genetic engineer, Lew Dodgson. Dodgson would love to steal a few dinosaur eggs as part of a scheme to hatch the perfect laboratory animal ("If they're extinct, then they can't have any rights," Dodgson observes). Recommended.                               Cliff Glaviano, Bowling Green State Univ. Libs., Ohio About Author Michael Crichton was born in Chicago and was graduated summa cum laude from Harvard University. At twenty-three, Crichton was a visiting lecturer in anthropology at Cambridge University, England. Upon his return to the States, Crichton began training as a doctor, and was graduated from Harvard Medical School in 1969. He paid his way through medical school by writing pseudonymous thrillers, one of which (A Case of Need, 1968) won an Edgar Award. By the time he graduated, Crichton had already written a bestseller (The Andromeda Strain, 1969) and sold it to Hollywood. He then pursued postgraduate studies at the Salk Institute in California before taking up writing full time. Crichton has written ten novels — The Andromeda Strain, 1969; The Terminal Man, 1972; The Great Train Robbery, 1975; Eaters of the Dead, 1976; Congo, 1980; Sphere, 1987; Jurassic Park, 1990; Rising Sun, 1992; Disclosure, 1994; and The Lost World, 1995 — each of which displays an intimate knowledge of a different, specialist subject, among them primatology, neurobiology, biophysics, international economics, Nordic history and genetics. He has directed six movies, including Westworld, Coma, and The Great Train Robbery, and is the creator of the hit television series ER (which won eight emmys in 1995). He is a computer expert who wrote one of the first books about information technology (Electronic Life, 1983); he has run a software company; he has designed a computer game called Amazon; is a committed collector of modern art and the author of a learned study on Jasper Johns (Jasper Johns, 1977). His other works of nonfiction include Five Patients: The Hospital Explained, 1970, and Travels, 1988. Crichton's novels have been translated into twenty-four languages; eight of his novels have been made into films, including Jurassic Park, one of the most successful films in motion picture history. Michael Crichton is married and lives in Los Angeles. Book Dimension : length: (cm)17.2             width:(cm)10.7
  • Prey

    作者:Crichton, Michael

    Book Description In the Nevada desert, an experiment has gone horribly wrong. A cloud of nanoparticles—micro-robots—has escaped from the laboratory. This cloud is self-sustaining and self-reproducing. It is intelligent and learns from experience. For all practical purposes, it is alive. It has been programmed as a predator. It is evolving swiftly, becoming more deadly with each passing hour. Every attempt to destroy it has failed. And we are the prey. As fresh as today's headlines, Michael Crichton'smost compelling novel yet tells the story of a mechanical plague and the desperate efforts of a handful of scientists to stop it. Drawing on up-to-the-minute scientific fact, Prey takes us into the emerging realms of nanotechnology and artificial distributed intelligence—in a story of breathtaking suspense. Prey is a novel you can't put down. Because time is running out. Amazon.com In Prey, bestselling author Michael Crichton introduces bad guys that are too small to be seen with the naked eye but no less deadly or intriguing than the runaway dinosaurs that made 1990's Jurassic Park such a blockbuster success. High-tech whistle-blower Jack Forman used to specialize in programming computers to solve problems by mimicking the behavior of efficient wild animals--swarming bees or hunting hyena packs, for example. Now he's unemployed and is finally starting to enjoy his new role as stay-at-home dad. All would be domestic bliss if it were not for Jack's suspicions that his wife, who's been behaving strangely and working long hours at the top-secret research labs of Xymos Technology, is having an affair. When he's called in to help with her hush-hush project, it seems like the perfect opportunity to see what his wife's been doing, but Jack quickly finds there's a lot more going on in the lab than an illicit affair. Within hours of his arrival at the remote testing center, Jack discovers his wife's firm has created self-replicating nanotechnology--a literal swarm of microscopic machines. Originally meant to serve as a military eye in the sky, the swarm has now escaped into the environment and is seemingly intent on killing the scientists trapped in the facility. The reader realizes early, however, that Jack, his wife, and fellow scientists have more to fear from the hidden dangers within the lab than from the predators without. The monsters may be smaller in this book, but Crichton's skill for suspense has grown, making Prey a scary read that's hard to set aside, though not without its minor flaws. The science in this novel requires more explanation than did the cloning of dinosaurs, leading to lengthy and sometimes dry academic lessons. And while the coincidence of Xymos's new technology running on the same program Jack created at his previous job keeps the plot moving, it may be more than some readers can swallow. But, thanks in part to a sobering foreword in which Crichton warns of the real dangers of technology that continues to evolve more quickly than common sense, Prey succeeds in gripping readers with a tense and frightening tale of scientific suspense.                                     --Benjamin Reese From Publishers Weekly From the opening pages of Crichton's electrifying new thriller, his first in three years, readers will know they are in the hands of a master storyteller (Timeline, Jurassic Park, etc.). The book begins with a brief intro noting the concerns of Crichton (and others) with the nascent field of nanotechnology, "the quest to build manmade machinery of extremely small size, on the order of... a hundred billionths of a meter"-for this is a cautionary novel, one with a compelling message, as well as a first-rate entertainment.Rare for Crichton, the novel is told in the first person, by Jack Forman, a stay-at-home dad since he was fired from his job as a head programmer for a Silicon Valley firm. In the novel's first third, Crichton, shades of his Disclosure, smartly explores sexual politics as Jack struggles with self-image and his growing suspicion that his dynamic wife, Julia, a v-p for the technology firm Xymos, is having an affair. But here, via several disturbing incidents, such as Jack's infant daughter developing a mysterious and painful rash, Crichton also seeds the intense drama that follows after Julia is hospitalized for an auto accident, and Jack is hired by Xymos to deal with trouble at the company's desert plant. There, he learns that Xymos is manufacturing nanoparticles that, working together via predator/prey software developed by Jack, are intended to serve as a camera for the military. The problem, as Crichton explains in several of the myriad (and not always seamlessly integrated) science lessons that bolster the narrative, is that groups of simple agents acting on simple instructions, without a central control, will evolve unpredictable, complex behaviors (e.g., termites building a termite mound). To meet deadlines imposed by financial pressures, Xymos has taken considerable risks. One swarm of nanoparticles has escaped the lab and is now evolving quickly-adapting to desert conditions, feeding off mammalian flesh (including human), reproducing and learning mimicry-leading to the novel's shocking, downbeat ending.Crichton is at the top of his considerable game here, dealing with a host of important themes (runaway technology, the deleterious influence of money on science) in a novel that's his most gripping since Jurassic Park. In the long run, this new book won't prove as popular as that cultural touchstone (dinos, nanoparticles aren't), but it'll be a smash hit and justifiably so. Film rights sold to 20th Century Fox; simultaneous abridged and unabridged audiotape and CD editions; large-print edition. (One-day laydown Nov. 25) From Booklist Crichton is the master of the sci-tech thriller, and nowhere is that more evident than in his latest page-turner, a scary, wild ride that is, without a doubt, his best in years. Jack Forman has been a stay-at-home dad since losing his job at an up-and-coming Silicon Valley technology company. Fired for discovering the company's illegal activities, Jack is taking care of his three children while his successful wife, Julia, is working at a similar company, Xymos Technology. Xymos has developed sophisticated nanoparticles for medical use, and Julia has been working long hours on the project. Jack suspects she is having an affair, but it turns out to be much more sinister than that. When Julia is injured in a car accident, Jack is called to the secretive Xymos lab in Nevada to help out with the project. It turns out the lab is in trouble; a swarm of nanoparticles escaped into the wild and has been evolving based on a program Jack designed called PREDPREY, which incorporated predator/prey interactions. The swarm is not only acting like a predator but also reproducing and killing desert animals. It is hunting the people in the Xymos compound, and it quickly becomes apparent that it can kill humans as well. As Jack uncovers the magnitude of the swarm's power, he realizes that the threat extends far beyond the isolated lab in the desert. As always, Crichton does an admirable job of explaining complex scientific ideas and integrating them with his gripping story. Like Jurassic Park (1990), Prey is a cautionary tale of the dangerous roads that carelessly used technology can take us down. This unpredictable, wild ride is not to be missed.                              Kristine Huntley From School Library Journal Adult/High School-An absorbing cautionary tale of science fact and fiction. Jack Forman has been laid off from his Silicon Valley job as a senior software programmer and has become a househusband, while his wife continues her career with a biotech firm involved in defense contracting. Jack is called in as a consultant to debug one of their products, and finds himself confronting a full-blown emergency, about which his wife and others in the organization have been suspiciously deceptive. Crichton's sure hand sustains a tension-filled narrative as harrowing events unfold. Jack discovers that the "problem product" is a lethal, self-replicating swarm of bioengineered particles released into the desert that imperils the environment as well as the scientists who created it. He is pitted against an exponentially growing and increasingly sophisticated organism encoded with predator/prey behaviors, capable of mimicry as well as learning. Final scenes are dramatic, brutal, and jarring, with the outcome tantalizingly unresolved. Significant chunks of scientific information are packaged within the story line, and some segments are blended less smoothly than others. This scarcely matters, however, as most readers will speed past the rough spots and accept improbable leaps of imagination whenever necessary in hot pursuit of the gripping, fast-paced action. Overall, a compelling read for students intrigued by cutting-edge technologies, and rife with opportunities for discussion of ethics in scientific research.                            Lynn Nutwell, Fairfax City Regional Library, VA From AudioFile A Michael Crichton novel is an education in itself. His monster stories are built on the potential threat of today's technology, and the technology is always cutting-edge. His science is always well researched and meticulous, and his books are always informative. For that reason alone the audiobook is a satisfactory vehicle for PREY, a distinctly nasty monster tale built upon a weird intersection between computer programming, genetic engineering, and nano-technology--swarms of tiny camera lenses bred upon the backs of bacteria. George Wilson has plenty to explain here, and he admirably carries a tale that is one endless exposition, driven by a series of cliff-hangers. This is not Crichton's best novel, but Wilson gives it his best, and until the movie comes along, this unabridged audio is the recommended medium for this book. D.W. About Author Michael Crichton is best known for the novels Jurassic Park and State of Fear. He is also the creator of the television series ER. The first of his controversial novels was published while he was still in medical school. Book Dimension: length: (cm)17.3                 width:(cm)10.8
  • 隐身人

    作者:威尔斯

    世界文学名著精粹 (连环画版) 隐身人 翻开本书,一则则充满紧张悬疑、冒险刺激 的故事情书,一个个洋溢着勇敢与奋斗精神 的传奇故事,就会呈现在你的眼前。故事中 有平凡的小人物,也有伟大的英雄,你可以 和他们共享丰富多彩、生趣盎然的人生。 《世弄文学名著精粹(连环画版)》是经典文 学名著与连环画的结合。深入浅出的故事情 节,生动的插画,一方面可帮助数子们欣赏 一流的文学作品,另一方面也可以激发数子 们丰富的想像力及创造力;潜移默化中,也 打好了孩子们造句写作文的基础。
  • 莫罗博士岛

    作者:[英] 赫·乔·威尔斯

    莫罗博士岛:莫罗博士在一个荒岛上进行一项令人毛骨悚然的实验,他将野兽改造为半人半兽的怪物。然而没有想到,怪物的兽性大发,小岛上一片恐怖。 新人来自火星:戴维斯突然发现,全球出现越来越多的异常儿童。这些儿童智力超人、身体健康,更令人吃惊的是这都是火星人在改变人类的基因,培养出一种新人。而戴维斯最后发现,自己的妻子甚至自己,其实也是新人。 获得自由的世界:全球二百个地区受到了原子弹的轰炸,战争使各国成了一片废墟,残存的各国政要痛定思痛,决定建立全球新秩序,在废墟上成立新的世界共和国。
  • 城 科幻三部曲

    作者:张系国

  • 泰坦棋手

    作者:[美]菲利普·迪克

    人类惨败于外星人之手,种族命运取决于一张小小的棋盘。赢得比赛,人类这一种族便能获得继续生存的权力;输掉比赛,人类将渐渐枯萎,直至消亡。 外星人拥有无与伦比的优势,他们具有洞察人心的超能力,人类棋手的任何思考都逃不过他们的眼睛。此外,他们的特工还乔装打扮,以人类的面目出现,占据了人类各个组织的核心位置,甚至能参与人类棋手的选拔过程。 他们选中的人类棋手是皮特·戈登,一个沉迷于麻醉药品的瘾君子,在与人类棋手的竞技中屡遭败绩,甚至输掉了自己的妻子。 无可救药、一心自杀的厌世者皮特·戈登,他将代表人类,参加这场博弈。
  • 守望者 下

    作者:[美]阿兰·摩尔

    《守望者》不论在漫画界与主流媒体都备受赞誉,被视为漫画中的经典作品。《守望者》是美国《时代周刊》2005年评选出的“1923年至今百部最佳英文小说”之一,同时它以漫画这种作品形式获得了雨果奖(有“科幻艺术界的诺贝尔奖”之称)。它的情节错综复杂,画面华丽优美,具备史诗般宏大的主题,称得上是图画小说的里程碑。 作者阿兰•摩尔在《守望者》中反映出了对于冷战时期美国公众焦虑的深思,并对传统的超级英雄观念进行了批判。《守望者》描绘了一段美国20世纪40年代至80年代之间的虚构历史,此时的美国正处于与苏联爆发核战争的危机边缘。那是一个特殊的年代,虽然超级英雄曾帮助美国赢得了越南战争,但自发性的蒙面英雄已被法律明文禁止,蒙面英雄被宣布为不法分子,他们的一切侠义行为都成了不法行为。因此,大多数超级英雄纷纷退休,少数则继续为政府工作。漫画中的故事聚焦于几位主人公的个人挣扎与奋斗,他们因为一起前任同僚的被害案件而不得不再次出山,然而,调查显示这一切仅仅是个开始,在谋杀案的背后还隐藏着另一个阴谋……最终,他们将不得不做出一个关于正义,关于拯救,关于未来的决定。 蒙面英雄中的一员被谋杀,背后隐藏着天大的阴谋,下一个目标又是谁?末日将至,冷战即将升级为核战,谁能力挽狂澜?超级英雄对于世人究竟是福还是祸?守望者监管世人,又有谁来监管守望者? ☆获得科幻艺术界的至高荣誉——雨果奖(此前从未有漫画获得此项大奖)。 ☆美国《时代周刊》2005年评选出的“1923年至今百部最佳英文小说”之一! ☆世界顶尖艺术家的巅峰之作,图画小说史上的里程碑。 ☆彻底颠覆超级英雄的漫画,美国漫画新时代开端的标志! ☆“DC漫画必读25部经典”之一! ☆大开本,铜版纸,全彩印刷! ☆附赠8K海报! ☆文后附加译者解读,便于读者理解漫画中大量的典故、引用、比喻、讽刺和暗示等。 这是一部改变了整个行业,挑战了漫画所能达到的最高成就的著作。如果你从未接触过图画小说,《守望者》是一个最佳的开端。如果你已经读过本书,是时候再细细品味一遍了。
  • 星纪原

    作者:董仁威,姚海军 主编

    抓住“信息控制”和“主体自由”之间的矛盾冲突这个当代科幻小说最常见主题,独具匠心地创造出“手指聊天聚会”这种反抗控制的低技术形式,给饱受高技术压迫的当代普通人一种新的解脱幻象。故事深得反乌托邦类型的魅力真谛。 ——最佳短篇科幻小说金奖作品《以太》颁奖词 奇妙的海岛世界、引人入胜的故事、灵动优美的语言,用奇幻的想象构造出一个科幻的世界设定,用神话的色彩描述出一个逻辑自洽的经济体系,融幻想文学的魅力于一体,在科幻和奇幻的边界上给我们带来全新的体验。 ——最佳中篇科幻小说金奖作品《开膛手在风之皮尔城》颁奖词
  • 小松与大盗贼

    作者:拉拉

    2010年,世博会在上海火热举行期间,扬名星际的外星大盗贼抓住机会,从宇宙文明的警官手中成功脱逃。 与此同时,实为黑客高手的上海少女杨小松也碰上了离奇古怪之事——在震惊上海的网络瘫痪事件发生后,她的平板电脑“神灵附体”了! 与大盗贼邂逅之后,杨小松和大盗贼遭遇了一系列怪诞诡奇的经历,外星杀手的追杀,酒吧老板的神秘收藏,章鱼保罗神奇预言的真相……这一切的一切,竟事关宇宙的生死存亡! 危急关头,宇宙大盗贼和地球小黑客联手上演了一出救世奇迹。 推荐词: 中国赛伯朋克风格科幻优秀之作,令人眼花缭乱的技术描写和紧张曲折的故事情节的完美结合。—— 著名科幻作家 王晋康 中国版《银河系漫游指南》。拉拉在小说中毫不吝惜地挥洒天才般的想象,制造出一个宏大、狂乱却很有趣的世界。警告:此书的副作用是颠覆人生观,意志薄弱者慎入。—— 更新代科幻作家 江 波 比起穿越到古代和思考未来而言,以大家都熟悉的现实环境为背景创作科幻小说,更考验作者的功力。你既不能说得太过——否则读者会指责你胡编滥造,又不能畏手畏脚——那就失去了科幻小说的醍醐味。拉拉巧妙而熟练地避开了这个矛盾,用《银河系漫游指南》那种轻松、诙谐的方式,以小见大地讲了一个恢弘的冒险故事。《小松与大盗贼》也许不是《三体》式的科幻经典,也许不是好莱坞式的大作,但就“有趣”和“精彩”来说,它绝对值得一读。—— 2012角川华语轻小说大赛金奖得主、新锐科幻作家 墨熊
  • 童恩正卷

    作者:童恩正,世界华人科幻协会组编,董仁威 姚

    本书收录了著名科幻作家童恩正的中短篇科幻小说代表作品《古峡迷雾》、《雪山魔笛》、《珊瑚岛上的死光》、《遥远的爱》、《在时间的铅幕后面》等共17篇。 适合青少年读者、科幻和文学爱好者阅读。 开本 880X1230 32开 327千字 1彩插