• Complain

Elizabeth Hand - Icarus Descending

Here you can read online Elizabeth Hand - Icarus Descending full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. genre: Science fiction. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover

Icarus Descending: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Icarus Descending" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Though billed as a novel about the Earth imperiled by a colliding asteroid, and though such an asteroid, called Icarus, does indeed threaten the planet in Hands third novel, readers should not expect a familiar near-future disaster thriller. Instead, Hand combines a variety of science fiction elements into an original and colorful weave. Hundreds of years in the future, various factions war over Earths fading resources, and geneslavesthe products of genetic engineeringserve their human Masters. But thats changing. An ancient military android, dubbed Metatron, has fomented a rebellion of the geneslaves. The Aviator Imperator Margalis Tastannin, who died at the end of Hands Winterlong but is now resurrected in a cyborg body, pursues Metatron. Meanwhile, other characters from Winterlong end up among the rebels. In all the confusion, warnings about the asteroid have gone unnoticed save by Metatron, who sees the coming cataclysm as the final blow against the Masters. Hand keeps the story moving briskly, and her future world is filled with vivid images made more striking by her evocative prose. The only drawback is the inconclusive endingthe story will obviously be resolved in a later book.

Elizabeth Hand: author's other books


Who wrote Icarus Descending? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Icarus Descending — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Icarus Descending" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Elizabeth Hand

Icarus Descending

Winterlong, Book 3

For my mother and my father,

Alice Ann and Edward Hand, with all my love and thanks

But when, from flesh born mortal,

Mans blood on earth lies fallen,

A dark, unfading stain,

Who then by incantations

Can bid blood live again?

Zeus in his pure wisdom ended

That sages skill who summoned

Dead flesh to rise from darkness

And live a second time;

Lest murder cheaply mended

Invite mens hands to crime

Aeschylus, Agamemnon

Ah, Dr. AustinWhat do you think of them? I see theres War in Hell.

J. G. Ballard, The Atrocity Exhibition

1

Dr. Luther Burdocks Daughter

O MY SISTER KALAMAT. It is here again

The voice was that of my sister Cumingia, she who has engraved upon her breast the image of a shell from a sea we have never glimpsed save in our dreams. Her voice was strained with worry, as it had been for many weeks now, ever since our Masters had been given one by one to the Ether.

I smiled wearily and pointed to a cushion in the nav chamber where I was working. I was sifting through the records left behind by our Masters, hoping to find something that might explain the myriad strange wings that had entered our world these last months. Sister Cumingia. Please, sit.

Cumingia gazed at the cushion and shook her head: it had been designed for one of our Masters, and so was much too small for her. I will stand, Kalamat.

I glanced back at the monitor that I had been scrolling through, but after a moment felt Cumingias gaze boring into me, anxious as a childs. I sighed and switched off the monitor, and turned my full attention to her.

Yes, my sister.

Cumingia leaned against the curved wall of the stations nav chamber. The lines of her lovely face were drawn tight, so that she resembled one of the Masters more than she did a sister of mine and one of the children of Luther Burdock. She hesitated, her large strong hands crossed upon her chest, then finally began to speak.

It is the little oracle, sister Kalamat. The one I told you about; the one that speaks of the thing called Icarus.

I pursed my lips and nodded. Those of us who still lived on the station called Quirinus had grown too familiar with oracles since our Masters began to die: random or not-so-random holofiled images generated in the wake of the deaths of the ruling Ascendancy of the HORUS colonies. Most of the oracles were merely warnings sent from besieged Masters on other space stations. Some were from cloned geneslaves like my sisters and me, who claimed they were members of a rebel Alliance; yet others appeared to be purely random images produced by the collapse of databases at Totma 3 and Helena Aulis and Hotei.

But the one that Cumingia had seen was different. She had first glimpsed it when she entered that part of the station library that had always been forbidden to energumens. Since then it had appeared three times in as many solar weeks, to Cumingia but also to others tending the files and records on Quirinus. I had never seen it.

Its message has changed? I asked.

Cumingia shook her head. No. It is as alwaysbut this time I had the chance to record it, sister Kalamat! Would you like to see it?

I nodded eagerly, moving away from my sister to allow room between us for the holofile. Cumingia placed the recorder on the tiled floor and stepped back. An instant later an image appeared.

It appeared to be an eye, or rather, a simulacrum of an eye formed of light, with a pulsing darkness at its center where a pupil would bea humans eye, and not an energumens. Wispy threads that might have been mist or perhaps gray strands of tissue flowed behind it, and it was surrounded by the engulfing darkness that the HORUS coloniesthe Human Orbital Research Units in Spacehave yet to penetrate.

What is it? Cumingias whisper made the hairs on my neck prickle. I shook my head, frowning.

I do not know. It cant be a real eyethat must be some trickery of whoever originally filed the image. Is there a date, or name?

Cumingias hand pressed against mine. Wait, she said. You will seethere, now

Beneath the dully flickering orb, numerals appeared.

SAN ENCINO JET PROPULSION LABORATORY APOLLO OBJECTS TRACKING PROJECT 06262172, UNITS 729843

SUBJECT: ICARUS

A filing date some four hundred years earlier, from the time when our father Luther Burdock first lived; a location on Earth that no longer existed. I leaned forward to read more closely, but the golden letters had already disappeared. Before I could ask Cumingia to scroll them for me again, a voice began to speak.

astrometric starplate at Mount Palomar shows parhelion passage at approximately 0818 June 29, with potentially catastrophic alignment of descending node at

A mans voice, speaking slowly and with great care, as though reading from a prompter.

it is of the utmost importance that the JPL Project permits immediate release of warning transcripts and all other information relating to this disastr

A burst of static cut off the recorded transmission. An instant of silence, and the loop repeated itself twice more. Then, abruptly, the mans voice was gone. Instead there was a shrill, rather childish, voice, repeating the same word over and over and over again:

Icarus. Icarus. Icarus. Icarus.

After about a minute it faded into eerie silence.

Every time, Cumingia said softly, after we had stared into the empty air for several moments. It is the same thing: the same image, the same two voices. I have tried to trace its origin, but the coordinates change. She tilted her head and stared at me, her huge black eyes beseeching. What is it, O my sister Kalamat?

I frowned and shook my head. I had her play the recording again, and again; as though some new wonder might be revealed, some new meaning teased from the nearly toneless voices with their garbled message. At last I bade her retrieve the recording and put it away.

It is nothing, I announced. I could see relief and also disappointment clouding my sisters eyes, but she said not a word. Another random transmission from one of the fallen colonies, like that call for help that was two years old.

Cumingia nodded, then added hesitantly, None of our brothers or sisters in the other colonies have seen it.

I shrugged and returned to my desk, with its array of tiny, human-sized monitors and nav aids. Obviously the transmission is carried only within our range. You have shown this to our other sisters?

A pause before Cumingia answered. Most of them.

And what do they think?

Cumingia bit her lip before replying. They think it is another omen.

Of what?

We do not know. But this name, Icarusit is a mans name, a human name. We fear it presages some means of retaliation against us, some punishment for the rebel uprisings.

I laughed then, turning to look at my sister: so much taller than any human, and far stronger and lovelier, with the intricate crosshatch of scars where her breasts had been and the delicate wings of the shell that is her namesake etched upon her cheeks. There are no humans left to fight us, sister! Not up here, at least. And below, on the Element I made a flicking motion with my fingers. Below, our father awaits us. And he will not allow us to come to harm.

At mention of our father Cumingia blinked. The silvery pupils dilated in her glowing black eyes. I felt a flash of anger within me, like a tiny flame. Cumingia did not believe that our father still lived. Of all my sisters I was the only one who still carried the image of Luther Burdock in my heart, heard his voice as I lay in my bed and waited for sleep to find me in the stations false night: a voice that the centuries had not stilled. Because I believed that, like his children, Luther Burdock had not been allowed to die. I believed that he waited for us, waited for me, somewhere on the Element below, and that someday we would rejoin him, as he had promised.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Icarus Descending»

Look at similar books to Icarus Descending. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «Icarus Descending»

Discussion, reviews of the book Icarus Descending and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.