book cover of Angel Station
Added by 11 members
 

Angel Station

(1989)
A novel by

 
 
Publisher's Weekly
Ubu has four arms, a fantastically faithful memory and is 13 years old. His 11-year-old ''sister'' Maria is more conventionally constructed, yet so psychic she considers herself a witch. (Both mature with the artificial aid of ''mones'' to the time of their late teens.) Their ''father,'' Pasco, a small-time trader with an ancient spaceship, originally assembled them from spare genetic material and personality programs, but he commits suicide while in the throes of a depression, leaving his children to fend for themselves. Ubu compounds their problems by making an unwise business move, putting them deeply in debt--in danger of losing the ship and facing a life of virtual indenture. An attempt to capitalize on Maria's psychic abilities in a casino ends in disaster, leading to their arrest, escape and lives pursued on the edge of the law. Williams ( Hardwired ) colorfully evokes the life of the trader families and their honkytonk space stations. With its emphasis on youth, beauty, sex and mischief, the novel also conjures a contemporary mood agreeably distinct from its futuristic setting.


Genre: Science Fiction

Visitors also looked at these books


Used availability for Walter Jon Williams's Angel Station


About Fantastic Fiction       Information for Authors