The ship who sang

248 pages

English language

Published Aug. 8, 1969 by Ballantine Books.

ISBN:
978-0-345-27551-6
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OCLC Number:
4900943

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4 stars (1 review)

The story of a woman who had been born human but whose brain had been implanted in the body of an intergalactic scout ship.

14 editions

Oh, fardles!

4 stars

it's a fairly entertaining oldish novel about a woman who has been implanted in a spaceship.

Raises a lot of interesting moral questions: from what I understand, she and her peers were born immobile, and of course becoming a brainship gives them mobility—but still, the conditioning necessary for this takes place from birth, and so they obviously can't give consent. Also, they are essentially indentured serfs to the Central Worlds until they can "Pay-off"—which sometimes takes hundreds of years. I didn't feel that these ethical issues were quite well enough explored.

I will forever find Helva's declaration "Imagine calling red hair and freckles sweet!" bewildering

It's a "fix-up" novel (made up of several previously published short stories), which accounts for its episodic nature. I thought the second half was better than the first (it was also written later).

Subjects

  • Space ships -- Fiction.
  • Cyborgs -- Fiction.