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Reviewed by Sammi of Two Courts 3.18.2001. Circuit of Heaven The Nitty Gritty: Personas: "'He said that when all those self-conciousnesses wake up stuck
inside some lizard body or something weird, taking care of kids
or being policemen or some other crap job, they must be pretty pissed
off. He said a Construct has three or four names at least--but the
one he tells you isn't real. It's like a brand name or something." "'At first you're a bunch of I's, scared shitless, like
a sack of wet cats. Then you get resigned to the fact that there's
no way out of the sack. Still, you hold yourself back, you didn't
ask for this shit. These weird memories, strange ways of thinking
about things, emotions you never felt before. Hell, even the food
don't taste right.' He turned his hands back and forth. 'Even your
own hands. But after while you start living this new life, giving
up the old ones, little by little. Before you know it, you want
this life, you got things you want to do with it--all of you, together.
That's when you start saying 'we.' You might not even notice when
it first happens. It'll seem like the most natural thing in the
world.'" Origin: Circuit of Heaven has a refreshing take on multiples. In this
world of the future, artificially created humans--called Constructs--are
infused with an identity that is formed from the combination of
about three different people. While the original makers intended
for a completely new personality to be born, they found that the
pieces would divide and recover their initial identities, rather
than merge flawlessly into one. It caused no real problems, however,
so they just kept on at it. So you have an entire world of servant-class humans who are
accepted as being three minds in one. So maybe it is refreshing
to read a book where people walk around and say things like 'we'
and 'our' for their personal pronouns! Get over the caste problem,
and there's real potential here... Presentation: We'll be honest: we mostly read this because we were interested
in the Constructs. The book itself is decent sci-fi, dealing with
future tech and digital life vs. physical life, so pick it up if
you're interested in reading about a world where most people uploaded
themselves into a mainframe. It's not bad, but nothing amazingly
gripping. "'There's two schools of thought on that.' Final Verdict:
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