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Hybrid Child

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A classic of Japanese speculative fiction that blurs the line between consumption and creation when a cyborg assumes the form and spirit of a murdered child
Until he escaped, he had been called "Sample B #3," but he had never liked this name. That would surprise them—that he could feel one way or another about it. He was designed to reshape himself based on whatever life forms he ingested; he was not made to think, and certainly not to assume the shape of a repair technician whose cells he had sampled and then simply walk out of the secure compound.

Artificial Intelligence is all too real in this classic of Japanese science fiction by Mariko Ōhara. Jonah, a child murdered by her mother, has become the spirit of an AI-controlled house where the rogue cyborg once known as Sample B #3 takes refuge and, making a meal of the dead girl buried under the house, takes Jonah's form. On faraway Planet Caritas, an outpost of human civilization, the female AI system that governs society has become insane. Meanwhile, the threat of the Adiaptron Empire, the machine race that #3 was built to fight, remains.

With the familiar strangeness of a fairy tale, Ōhara's novel traverses the mysterious distance between body and mind, between the mechanics of life and the ghost in the machine, between the infinitesimal and infinity. The child as mother, the mother as monster, the monster as hero: this shape-shifting story of nourishment, nurture, and parturition is a rare feminist work of speculative fiction and received the prestigious Seiun (Nebula) Award in 1991. Hybrid Child is the first English translation of a major work of science fiction by a female Japanese author.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 24, 2018
      Ōhara’s outstanding, groundbreaking feminist cyberpunk novel won the Seiun Award, the highest honor in Japanese science fiction, in 1991; this is its first English translation, and it remains radical today. Humans have spread to other planets and are now fighting off the invading Adiaptron Empire, a race of self-replicating robots; the invaders’ goal is genocide, and they are bound to win eventually. As a weapon of last resort, human scientists create the Sample B Group, artificial intelligences designed to assimilate, imitate, and surpass any enemy on a biological level. B #3 escapes. Taking a dead human child’s name (Jonah) and aspect, she attempts to help the population of an outlying planet deal with the fact that the planet-running AI, which supplies everything necessary for life, is losing its grip on reality. In a world of bizarre mutations, Jonah is still the strangest and most dangerous, and the war will not stay away forever. Atmospheric, brutal, and wildly intelligent, Ōhara’s masterpiece is also translated with bravura and care (some of the concepts and orthography could not have been easy). It combines the future shock of Philip K. Dick’s work with the art direction of an anime, pleasurable and gripping as only the best of science fiction can be.

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