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Book Details

The Berserker Wars

78.6% complete
1981
Unknown
Never (or unknown...)
Science fiction
Science fiction, American
See 12
Introduction
Stone Place
The Face of the Deep
What T and I Did
Mr. Jester
The Winged Helmet
Starsong
Some Events at the Templar Radiant
Wings Out of Shadow
The Smile
Metal Murderer
Patron of the Arts
Book Cover
Has a genre Has comments Has an extract In my library In a series 
14058
Copyright © 1981 by Fred Saberhagen
No dedication.
Hal: We're here, surrounded by friendly Carmpan of whom we rarely see more than one or two at a time, and then usually only with some partial or symbolic physical barrier between us.
Comments may contain spoilers
Acknowledgements: Material original to this edition is copyright © 1981 by Fred Saberhagen. Other material contained herein was first published and is copyright as follows:

  • "Stone Place" © 1967 by Fred Saberhagen
  • "The Face of the Deep" © 1967 by Fred Saberhagen
  • "What T and I did?" © 1967 by Fred Saberhagen
  • "Mr. Jester" © 1967 by Fred Saberhagen
  • "The Winged Helmet" © 1969 by Fred Saberhagen
  • "Starsong" © 1979 by Fred Saberhagen
  • "Some Events at the Templar Radiant" © 1979 by Fred Saberhagen
  • "Wings out of Shadow" © 1974, UPD Publishing Corp. © 1979 by Fred Saberhagen
  • "The Smile" © 1979 by Fred Saberhagen
  • "The Adventure of the Metal Murderer" © 1979 by Omni Publications International, Inc.
  • "Patron of the Arts" © 1965 by Galaxy Publishing Corp. © 1967 Fred Saberhagen
Extract (may contain spoilers)
After five minutes had gone by with no apparent change in his situation, Karlsen realized that he might be going to live for a while yet.  And as soon as this happened, as soon as his mind dared open its eyes again, so to speak, he began to see the depths of space around him and what they held.

There followed a short time during which he seemed unable to move; a few minutes passed while he thought he might go mad.

He rode in a crystalline bubble of a launch about twelve feet in diameter.  The fortunes of war had dropped him here, halfway down the steepest gravitational hill in the known universe.

At the unseeable bottom of this hill lay a sun so massive that not a quantum of light could escape it with a visible wavelength.  In less than a minute he and his raindrop of a boat had fallen here, some unmeasurable distance out of normal space, trying to escape an enemy.  Karlsen had spent that falling minute in prayer, achieving something like calm, considering himself already dead.

But after that minute he was suddenly no longer falling.  He seemed to have entered an orbit - an orbit that no man had ever traveled before, amid sights no eyes had ever seen.

He rode above a thunderstorm at war with a sunset -  a ceaseless, soundless turmoil of fantastic clouds that filled half the sky like a nearby planet.  But this cloud-mass was immeasurably bigger than any planet, vaster even than most giant stars.  Its core and its cause was a hypermassive sun a billion times the weight of Sol.

The clouds were interstellar dust swept up by the pull of the hypermass; as they fell they built up electrical static which was discharged in almost continuous lightning.  Karlsen saw as blue-white the nearer flashes, those ahead of him as he rode.  But most of the flashes, like most of the clouds, were far below him, and so most of his light was sullen red, wearied by climbing just a section of this gravity cliff.

Karlsen 's little bubble-ship had artificial gravity of its own, and kept turning itself so its deck was down, so Karlsen saw the red light below him through the translucent deck, flaring up between hisspace-booted feet.  He sat in the one massive chair which was fixed in the center of the bubble, and which contained the boat's controls and life-support machinery.  Below the deck were one or two other opaque objects, one of these a small but powerful space-Warping engine.  All else around Karlsen was clear glass, holding in air, holding out radiation, but leaving his eyes and his soul naked to the deeps of space around him.

 

Added: 14-May-2024
Last Updated: 29-Oct-2024

Publications

 01-Dec-1981
Tor Books
Mass Market Paperback
In my libraryOrder from amazon.comHas a cover imageBook Edition Cover
Date Issued:
Cir 01-Dec-1981
Format:
Mass Market Paperback
Cover Price:
$2.95
Pages*:
399
Internal ID:
43805
Publisher:
ISBN:
0-523-48520-4
ISBN-13:
978-0-523-48520-1
Printing:
1
Country:
United States
Language:
English
Credits:
Franco Storchi  - Cover Artist
"LIFE AND DEATH IN
DREADFUL CONFLICT STROVE..."


It happened long ago and far away.  Perhaps in this galaxy, perhaps in one close by.  Two war-maddened races fought - and though both are gone, their legacy abides: the Frankenstein weapon that destroyed not only the enemy, but the creator.  The Berserkers, robotic, asteroid-sized killers programed to one purpose: to seek out and end life.  The death machines have harried their way across our galaxy.  Now they have come for us.

Here at last is the essence of the Berserker Saga in a single volume:
THE
BERSERKER
WARS


Fred Saberhagen is the author of the renowned Berserker Saga: Berserkers, Brother Assassin, Berserker's Planet, The Ultimate Enemy, and Berserker Man, as well as the enormously popular new Dracula series: The Dracula Tape, The Holmes Dracula File, An Old Friend of the Family, Thorne, and (coming soon from TOR) Dominion.  He is also the author of the massive new fantasy classic, Empire of the East, and, with Roger Zelazny, is the co-author of the spectacular new occult science fiction novel, Coils (also coming soon from TOR).
Cover:
Book CoverBook Back CoverBook Spine
Notes and Comments:
First printing, Devember 1981
First printing implied

Copyright page states ISBN: 48-520-4
Image File
01-Dec-1981
Tor Books
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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