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Book Details

Berserker

64.3% complete
1967
Unknown
Never (or unknown...)
See 11
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Goodlife
Patron Of The Arts
The Peacemaker
Stone Place
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Masque Of The Red Shift
Sign Of The Wolf
In The Temple Of Mars
The Face Of The Deep
Book Cover
Has a genre Has comments Has an extract In my library In a series 
14055
Copyright © 1967 by Fred Saberhagen
The machine was a vast fortress, containing no life, set by its long-dead masters to destroy anything that lived.
May contain spoilers
But they made it.
Comments may contain spoilers
All stories copyright 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966 by Galaxy Publishing Corporation.
Extract (may contain spoilers)
After some hours work, Herron found himself hungry and willing to pause for food.  Looking over what he had just done, he could easily imagine one of the sycophantic critics praising it: A huge canvas, of discordant and brutal line!  Aflame with a sense of engulfing menace!  And for once, Herron thought, the critic might be praising something good.

Turning away from his view of easel and blank bulkhead, Herron found that his captor had moved up silently to stand only an arm's length behind him, for all the world like some human kibitzer.

He had to chuckle. "I suppose you've some idiotic suggestion to make?"

The roughly man-shaped machine said nothing, though it had what might be a speaker mounted on what might be a face.  Herron shrugged and walked around it, going forward in search of the galley.  This ship had been only a few hours out from Earth on C-plus drive when the berserker machine had run it down and captured it; and Piers Herron, the only passenger, had not yet had time to learn his way around.

It was more than a galley, he saw when he reached it - it was meant to be a place where arty colonial ladies could sit and twitter over tea when they grew weary of staring at pictures.  The Frans Hals had been built as a traveling museum; then the war of life against berserker machines had grown hot around Sol, and BuCulture had wrongly decided that Earth's art treasures would be safer if shipped away to Tau Epsilon.  The Frans was ideally suited for such a mission, and for almost nothing else.

Looking further forward from the entrance to the galley, Herron could see that the door to the crew compartment had been battered down, but he did not go to look inside.  Not that it would bother him to look, he told himself; he was as indifferent to horror as he was to almost all other human things.  The Frans's crew of two were in there, or what was left of them after they had tried to fight off the berserker's boarding machines.  Doubtless they had preferred death to capture.

Herron preferred nothing.  Now he was probably the only living being - apart from a few bacteria - within half a light year; and he was pleased to discover that his situation did not terrify him; that his long-growing weariness of life was not just a pose to fool himself.

His metal captor followed him into the galley, watching while he set the kitchen devices to work.

"Still no suggestions?" Herron asked it.  "Maybe you're smarter than I thought."

"I am what men call a berserker," the man-shaped thing squeaked at him suddenly, in an ineffectual-sounding voice.  "I have captured your ship, and I will talk with you through this small machine you see.  Do you grasp my meanling?"

 

Added: 14-May-2024
Last Updated: 25-Oct-2024

Publications

 01-Jan-1980
Ace
Mass Market Paperback
In my libraryOrder from amazon.comHas a cover imageBook Edition Cover
Date Issued:
Cir 01-Jan-1980
Format:
Mass Market Paperback
Cover Price:
$2.25
Pages*:
243
Catalog ID:
05462-5
Internal ID:
43798
Publisher:
ISBN:
0-441-05462-5
ISBN-13:
978-0-441-05462-6
Printing:
4
Country:
United States
Language:
English
Credits:
Boris Vallejo  - Cover Artist
BERSERKER
THE DEATH MACHINES


Long ago, in a distant part of the galaxy, two alien races met - and fought a war of mutual extinction.  The sole legacy of that war was the weapon that ended it: the death machines, the BERSERKERS.  Guided by self-aware computers more intelligent than any human, these world-sized battlecraft carved a swath of death through the galaxy - until they arrived at the outskirts of the fledgling Empire of Man.

These are the stories of the frail creatures who must meet, this monstrous and implacable enemy - and who, by fighting it to a standstill, become the saviors of all living things.
Cover:
Book CoverBook Back CoverBook Spine
Notes and Comments:
Fourth printing based on the number line
Image File
01-Jan-1980
Ace
Mass Market Paperback

Related

Author(s)

 Fred Saberhagen
Birth: 18 May 1930 Chicago, Illinois, USA
Death: 29 Jun 2007 Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA

Awards

No awards found
*
  • I try to maintain page numbers for audiobooks even though obviously there aren't any. I do this to keep track of pages read and I try to use the Kindle version page numbers for this.
  • Synopses marked with an asterisk (*) were generated by an AI. There aren't a lot since this is an iffy way to do it - AI seems to make stuff up.
  • When specific publication dates are unknown (ie prefixed with a "Cir"), I try to get the publication date that is closest to the specific printing that I can.
  • When listing chapters, I only list chapters relevant to the story. I will usually leave off Author Notes, Indices, Acknowledgements, etc unless they are relevant to the story or the book is non-fiction.
  • Page numbers on this site are for the end of the main story. I normally do not include appendices, extra material, and other miscellaneous stuff at the end of the book in the page count.






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