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The Cyberiad: Fables for the Cybernetic Age…
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The Cyberiad: Fables for the Cybernetic Age (1965 original; edició 2014)

de Stanislaw Lem (Auteur)

MembresRessenyesPopularitatValoració mitjanaMencions
2,470375,377 (4.13)48
Trurl and Klaupacius are constructor robots who try to out-invent each other. They travel to the far corners of the cosmos to take on freelance problem-solving jobs, with dire consequences for their employers. The most completely successful of his books... here Lem comes closest to inventing a real universe (Boston Globe). Illustrations by Daniel Mr z. Translated by Michael Kandel."… (més)
Membre:marvincalmer
Títol:The Cyberiad: Fables for the Cybernetic Age
Autors:Stanislaw Lem (Auteur)
Informació:Penguin Classics (2014), Edition: 1st Edition, 304 pages
Col·leccions:La teva biblioteca
Valoració:
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Informació de l'obra

The Cyberiad: Fables for the Cybernetic Age de Stanisław Lem (Author) (1965)

Afegit fa poc perjaheath, wutherslgf, lachlak, esighamo, GeeVAy, davidw, Stagnant
Biblioteques llegadesTerence Kemp McKenna
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Es mostren 1-5 de 37 (següent | mostra-les totes)
This book may not be for everyone but by reading it in small doses I enjoyed most of the stories. But there were a few places that I found myself skimming rather than reading all the made up technical terms used by Trurl and his friend Klapaucius. The two constructors traveled the cosmos taking on various jobs and often getting into trouble before finding a solution to their problems. I doubt that I would ever reread it but I might try another of Lem's books at some point.
  hailelib | Feb 18, 2023 |
Early in my experience with Unix-like systems I discovered `fortune`. This program would occasionally provide me with a clever passage attributed `-- Stanislaw Lem, "Cyberiad"` "Who is this Stanislaw Lem fellow and what is a Cyberiad," I wondered. And then, because it was the mid-90s and search engines didn't exist yet, I did nothing.

A few years later, I started collecting quotes to add to my random signature program. A great many of them came from `fortune`, since it gave me a quip every time I logged in or out. The first Cyberiad quote that made it on the list was "[The brilliant Cerebron, attacking the problem analytically, discovered three distinct kinds of dragon: the mythical, the chimerical, and the purely hypothetical.] They were all, one might say, nonexistent, but each nonexisted in an entirely different way." Different modes of nonexistence, a fantastic puzzle for a philosophy minor like me. I wanted to find and read this book.

There are a few books and authors I keep in the back of my mind for eventual purchase. It gives me direction when I find myself in a bookstore: check the D section of Classics for The Vicomte de Bragelonne, check the A section of Sci-Fi for the HHGTTG radio series scripts, check the L section of Sci-Fi for Stanisław Lem… You would think it wouldn't be too hard to find a book by "the most widely read science fiction writer in the world," yet ten years went by without finding one of his books between Le Guin and Lewis. Tantalizingly, Google ran a fantastic narrative doodle (http://www.google.com/logos/lem/) based on The Cyberiad. I finally found a copy when I chanced to stop in to Red Letter Books in Boulder, enticed by a book about mangoes on the shelf out front. "Before I buy this, I need to see if they happen to have any Lem." Sure enough, my Quixotic quest found its goal, wedged in a dense shelf of mass market paperbacks.

The Cyberiad is a book of short stories about machines who build machines. The central character is Trurl, a constructor. He and his good friend Klapaucius the constructor build all manner of robots and devices, often on commission from rulers of distant worlds. Unlike the science fiction school led by Asimov, the engineering details of the machines and their scientific mechanism of action are of little importance. The stories are not about the machines but about the philosophical considerations and allegorical implications of such a device in a world not entirely dissimilar from ours. The first story, How The World Was Saved (http://english.lem.pl/home/bookshelf/how-the-word-was-saved) concerns a machine that can create anything starting with N. After creating concrete and abstract nouns, they ask the machine to do Nothing, whereby it starts to eliminate the universe.

Originally written in Polish, the book has a lot of rhymes and wordplay with sciency terms which works surprisingly well in translation (to English, at least.) The sidebar to the right has a poem produced by Trurl's Electronic Bard. Lem has a great facility for technical naming in a way that's fun rather than dry: The second, newer trail was opened up by the Imperium Myrapoclean, whose turboservoslaves carved a tunnel six billion miles in length through the heart of the Great Glossaurontus itself.

What I like best about The Cyberiad is how it resonates with my experience as a constructor of sorts. The book was written in 1967, when hardware was still the king of technology, before we realized that software eats the world. Yet the story Trurl's Machine and other passages describe the foibles of building, debugging, and otherwise producing a computer program better than any software-focused essay I've read. Throughout the book, Trurl displays the three cardinal virtues of the programmer: laziness, impatience, and hubris. If more tales were added to the Cyberiad today, perhaps the constructors would be programs which write other programs.

All makers and builders and coders and creators would do well to read The Cyberiad: Fables for the Cybernetic Age. A hypermedia book report (http://www.art.net/~hopkins/Don/lem/Cyberiad.html) claims the book inspired Will Wright to create SimCity; what might it do for you? Acquire it in cybernetic digital form or via a musty-bookstore-quest for a well-loved copy. ( )
1 vota flwyd | Nov 13, 2022 |
Wow, this book. This book is great. The stories within are imaginative and bizarre, they are fun and captivating, and they are hard and complex to follow.

I loved it. ( )
  GridCube | Jan 17, 2022 |
Imagine if Lewis Carroll and Dr. Seuss got hammered one night and held a contest to see who could write the craziest, most pun-filled story filled with fabricated words and ridiculous situations. Their output would probably be indistinguishable from Stanislaw Lem's works.
This is the 4th or 5th Lem book that I've read, and apart from [b:Solaris|95558|Solaris|Stanisław Lem|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1355011529s/95558.jpg|3333881], which is one of my favorite books, most have been like this book - just an insane mix of wonderful words and logic. Luckily, this book (like the other non-Solaris books that I've read) is not a single story, but a series of short stories or vignettes with a common set of characters. This makes it much easier to skim to the end of a chapter if the logic and situation gets TOO convoluted.
As much as I love his writing, Lem is definitely best taken in small doses. ( )
  KrakenTamer | Oct 23, 2021 |
Very silly in the cleverest way possible. The word play is at a level I wasn't aware was possible in Polish. I pity all the translators, that must've taken years to translate.

The stories are more about philosophical allegories than futuristic visions like pilot pirx. I loved the nested stories and the returning themes of happiness and world design. And basically everything else. ( )
  Paul_S | Dec 23, 2020 |
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Nom de l'autorCàrrecTipus d'autorObra?Estat
Lem, StanisławAutorautor primaritotes les edicionsconfirmat
義治, 村手翻訳autor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
Fernandes, StanislawAutor de la cobertaautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
Kandel, MichaelTraductorautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
Kannosto, MattiTraductorautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
Mróz, DanielIl·lustradorautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
Rey, LuisAutor de la cobertaautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
昭三, 吉上翻訳autor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
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Wikipedia en anglès (1)

Trurl and Klaupacius are constructor robots who try to out-invent each other. They travel to the far corners of the cosmos to take on freelance problem-solving jobs, with dire consequences for their employers. The most completely successful of his books... here Lem comes closest to inventing a real universe (Boston Globe). Illustrations by Daniel Mr z. Translated by Michael Kandel."

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