Mathematicians in Love
By (Author) Rudy Rucker
Introduction by Gregory Benford
Night Shade Books
Night Shade Books
1st January 2019
United States
General
Fiction
Science fiction
Adventure / action fiction
813.6
Paperback
432
Width 127mm, Height 178mm, Spine 23mm
306g
Two mathematicians vying for the same partner will change reality itself to win her love, from award-winning author Rudy Rucker.
Berkeley grad students Bela Kis and Paul Bridge have discovered the mathematical underpinnings of ultimate reality. But then they begin fighting over the same woman: the beguiling video-blogger, Alma Ziff.
First Bela gets Almas interest by starting the wildest rock band ever. Then Paul undertakes the ultimate computer hack: altering reality to make Alma his. But the change brings more than he bargained for: Alma is swept away into a higher world of mathematician cockroaches and cone shellsbent upon using our world to run experiments in mysterious metamathematics.
Its up to Bela to bring Alma back, repair reality, stop the aliens, and find true love in this wild and funny tale that romps across space, time, and logic.
Night Shade Books ten-volume series with Rudy Rucker collects nine of the brilliantly weird novels for which the mathematician-turned-author is known, as well as a tenth, never-before-published book, Million-Mile Road Trip. Were proud to collect in one place so much of the work of this influential figure in the early cyberpunk scene, and to share Ruckers fascinating, unique worldview with an entirely new generation of readers.
Praise for Mathematicians in Love
Full of quirky, charming life-forms human and otherwise and ruled by a god whos the female jellyfish-creator of Earth . . . Ruckers wild characters, off-the-wall situations, and wicked political riffs prove that writing SF spoofs, like Belas rock music avocation, beats the hell out of publishing a math paper. Publishers Weekly
May well be Rudy Ruckers best novelfunny, wise, fast, and inventive. Gregory Benford, author of Timescape and The Galactic Center Saga
In Mathematicians in Love Rucker has created a love story wrapped up in a cross-cultural mystery tour that could only have happened inside the mind of a crazy mathematician. Buy a ticket. Its well worth the price. SFRevu
Percolates with off-the-wall characters and trippy extra-dimensional shenanigans. Nobody writes math-based science fiction like Rudy Rucker does . . . A definite high point in his singular writing career. San Francisco Chronicle
All the pleasures of a Rucker novel come forth abundantly: playfully weird higher physics and math; bizarre conceptual psychedelia; distinctively Californian counter-cultural comedy; zany romance; doppelgangers; generally happy endings . . . Mathematicians in Love is an engaging and entertaining book, light yet thought-provoking, funny yet of some gravity. Locus
Praise for Rudy Rucker
Rudy Rucker should be declared a National Treasure of American Science Fiction. Someone simultaneously channeling Kurt Gdel and Lenny Bruce might start to approximate full-on Ruckerian warp-space, but without the sweet, human, splendidly goofy Rudy-ness at the core of the singularity. William Gibson
Ruckers writing is great like the Ramones are great: a genre stripped to its essence, attitude up the wazoo, and cartoon sentiments that reek of identifiable lives and issues. Wild math you can get elsewhere, but no one does the cyber version of beatnik glory quite like Rucker. New York Review of Science Fiction
For some two decades now, since the publication of his first novel, White Light, Rucker has combined an easygoing, trippy style influenced by the Beats with a deep engagement with knotty (or gnarly, to employ one of his favorite terms) intellectual conceits, based mainly in mathematics. In the typical Rucker novel, likably eccentric characterswho run the gamut from brilliant to near-certifiableencounter aspects of the universe that confirm that life is weirder than we can imagine. The Washington Post
Rudy Rucker is the most consistently brilliant imagination working in SF today. Charles Stross, author of The Laundry Files
Reading a Rudy Rucker book is like finding Poe, Kerouac, Lewis Carroll, and Philip K. Dick parked on your driveway in a topless 57 Caddy . . . and telling you theyre taking you for a RIDE. The funniest science fiction author around. Sci-Fi Universe
Rucker [gives you] more ideas per chapter than most authors use in an entire novel. San Francisco Chronicle
Praise for Mathematicians in Love
Full of quirky, charming life-forms human and otherwise and ruled by a god whos the female jellyfish-creator of Earth . . . Ruckers wild characters, off-the-wall situations, and wicked political riffs prove that writing SF spoofs, like Belas rock music avocation, beats the hell out of publishing a math paper. Publishers Weekly
May well be Rudy Ruckers best novelfunny, wise, fast, and inventive. Gregory Benford, author of Timescape and The Galactic Center Saga
In Mathematicians in Love Rucker has created a love story wrapped up in a cross-cultural mystery tour that could only have happened inside the mind of a crazy mathematician. Buy a ticket. Its well worth the price. SFRevu
Percolates with off-the-wall characters and trippy extra-dimensional shenanigans. Nobody writes math-based science fiction like Rudy Rucker does . . . A definite high point in his singular writing career. San Francisco Chronicle
All the pleasures of a Rucker novel come forth abundantly: playfully weird higher physics and math; bizarre conceptual psychedelia; distinctively Californian counter-cultural comedy; zany romance; doppelgangers; generally happy endings . . . Mathematicians in Love is an engaging and entertaining book, light yet thought-provoking, funny yet of some gravity. Locus
Praise for Rudy Rucker
Rudy Rucker should be declared a National Treasure of American Science Fiction. Someone simultaneously channeling Kurt Gdel and Lenny Bruce might start to approximate full-on Ruckerian warp-space, but without the sweet, human, splendidly goofy Rudy-ness at the core of the singularity. William Gibson
Ruckers writing is great like the Ramones are great: a genre stripped to its essence, attitude up the wazoo, and cartoon sentiments that reek of identifiable lives and issues. Wild math you can get elsewhere, but no one does the cyber version of beatnik glory quite like Rucker. New York Review of Science Fiction
For some two decades now, since the publication of his first novel, White Light, Rucker has combined an easygoing, trippy style influenced by the Beats with a deep engagement with knotty (or gnarly, to employ one of his favorite terms) intellectual conceits, based mainly in mathematics. In the typical Rucker novel, likably eccentric characterswho run the gamut from brilliant to near-certifiableencounter aspects of the universe that confirm that life is weirder than we can imagine. The Washington Post
Rudy Rucker is the most consistently brilliant imagination working in SF today. Charles Stross, author of The Laundry Files
Reading a Rudy Rucker book is like finding Poe, Kerouac, Lewis Carroll, and Philip K. Dick parked on your driveway in a topless 57 Caddy . . . and telling you theyre taking you for a RIDE. The funniest science fiction author around. Sci-Fi Universe
Rucker [gives you] more ideas per chapter than most authors use in an entire novel. San Francisco Chronicle
Praise for Mathematicians in Love
Full of quirky, charming life-forms human and otherwise and ruled by a god whos the female jellyfish-creator of Earth . . . Ruckers wild characters, off-the-wall situations, and wicked political riffs prove that writing SF spoofs, like Belas rock music avocation, beats the hell out of publishing a math paper. Publishers Weekly
May well be Rudy Ruckers best novelfunny, wise, fast, and inventive. Gregory Benford, author of Timescape and The Galactic Center Saga
In Mathematicians in Love Rucker has created a love story wrapped up in a cross-cultural mystery tour that could only have happened inside the mind of a crazy mathematician. Buy a ticket. Its well worth the price. SFRevu
Percolates with off-the-wall characters and trippy extra-dimensional shenanigans. Nobody writes math-based science fiction like Rudy Rucker does . . . A definite high point in his singular writing career. San Francisco Chronicle
All the pleasures of a Rucker novel come forth abundantly: playfully weird higher physics and math; bizarre conceptual psychedelia; distinctively Californian counter-cultural comedy; zany romance; doppelgangers; generally happy endings . . . Mathematicians in Love is an engaging and entertaining book, light yet thought-provoking, funny yet of some gravity. Locus
Praise for Rudy Rucker
Rudy Rucker should be declared a National Treasure of American Science Fiction. Someone simultaneously channeling Kurt Gdel and Lenny Bruce might start to approximate full-on Ruckerian warp-space, but without the sweet, human, splendidly goofy Rudy-ness at the core of the singularity. William Gibson
Ruckers writing is great like the Ramones are great: a genre stripped to its essence, attitude up the wazoo, and cartoon sentiments that reek of identifiable lives and issues. Wild math you can get elsewhere, but no one does the cyber version of beatnik glory quite like Rucker. New York Review of Science Fiction
For some two decades now, since the publication of his first novel, White Light, Rucker has combined an easygoing, trippy style influenced by the Beats with a deep engagement with knotty (or gnarly, to employ one of his favorite terms) intellectual conceits, based mainly in mathematics. In the typical Rucker novel, likably eccentric characterswho run the gamut from brilliant to near-certifiableencounter aspects of the universe that confirm that life is weirder than we can imagine. The Washington Post
Rudy Rucker is the most consistently brilliant imagination working in SF today. Charles Stross, author of The Laundry Files
Reading a Rudy Rucker book is like finding Poe, Kerouac, Lewis Carroll, and Philip K. Dick parked on your driveway in a topless 57 Caddy . . . and telling you theyre taking you for a RIDE. The funniest science fiction author around. Sci-Fi Universe
Rucker [gives you] more ideas per chapter than most authors use in an entire novel. San Francisco Chronicle
Rudy Rucker is a writer and a mathematician who worked for twenty years as a Silicon Valley computer science professor. He is regarded as contemporary master of science-fiction, and received the Philip K. Dick award twice. His thirty published books include both novels and non-fiction books on the fourth dimension, infinity, and the meaning of computation. A founder of the cyberpunk school of science-fiction, Rucker also writes SF in a realistic style known as transrealism, often including himself as a character. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.