From /tmp/sf.4146 Tue Aug 9 01:47:21 1994 Xref: liuida rec.arts.sf.reviews:499 alt.books.reviews:2739 Path: liuida!sunic!EU.net!howland.reston.ans.net!gatech!udel!news.sprintlink.net!dg-rtp!sheol!dont-reply-to-paths From: Evelyn.Chimelis.Leeper@att.com () Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews,alt.books.reviews Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.written Subject: "Robots in Time" series by William F. Wu Approved: sfr%sheol@concert.net (rec.arts.sf.reviews moderator) Message-ID: <9403081109.ZM4960@mtgpfs1.mt.att.com> Date: 10 Mar 94 01:18:43 GMT Lines: 100 ISAAC ASIMOV'S ROBOTS IN TIME: PREDATOR by William F. Wu AvoNova, ISBN 0-380-76510-1, April 1993, 244pp, US$4.99 ISAAC ASIMOV'S ROBOTS IN TIME: MARAUDER by William F. Wu AvoNova, ISBN 0-380-76511-X, July 1993, 243pp, US$4.99 ISAAC ASIMOV'S ROBOTS IN TIME: WARRIOR by William F. Wu AvoNova, ISBN 0-380-76512-8, 1993, 243pp, US$4.99 ISAAC ASIMOV'S ROBOTS IN TIME: DICTATOR by William F. Wu AvoNova, ISBN 0-380-76514-4, Feb 1994, 230pp, US$4.99 A book review by Evelyn C. Leeper Copyright 1994 Evelyn C. Leeper These are the first four of a (probably) six-book series. The basic premise (revealed in detail in the first book and recapped in a briefing to the main characters at the beginning of each of the subsequent volumes) is that a scientist has created a "gestalt robot" made up of six component robots which somehow merge to form one "super-robot." This robot starts having problems related to the interaction of its gestalt parts. After several of these robots fail, one decides it must shut itself down to prevent harm from coming to humans because of its problems. It gets a scientist to split it into its six component parts (each a completely functional robot) and sends these parts back in time, miniaturizing them as part of the process. (How? Well, there is some attempt at explaining this in the first volume, but let's just say it's technobabble.) The first part went to the Cretaceous; the team sent back to recover it to try to solve the malfunction doesn't find out until the end of the book that the other parts went to different times and places. (This is not exactly a spoiler, since the reader knows there are more volumes to come.) The second went to 1600's Jamaica during the time of Sir Henry Morgan, the third went to Roman Germany during the First or Second Century, and the fourth went to Moscow in 1941. After a while, though, the miniaturization wears off and the component robots regain their full size. Then their programming forces them to act in accordance with Asimov's Three Laws, trying to protect humans from harm and therefore changing history. What's more, if they survive back to the time of their departure, they explode "with nuclear force" (more technobabble). In DICTATOR, for example, our team hears of a nuclear explosion in Moscow (why haven't all the explosions already happened, and why is everything unchanged?) and goes back to retrieve number four from World War II Moscow. They have adventures, accomplish their mission (this is a surprise?), give a moralizing little speech about learning from history, and are told to go to Kublai Khan's China for number five. Definitely a popcorn book, requiring no intellectual investment or offering much beyond "time travelers coping with another age." (The questions I mentioned a couple of sentences ago are not dealt with at all.) If you like this sort of thing, this is the sort of thing you will like. Oh, this book also "features a database of fantastic illustrations by award-winning computer artist Matt Elson." I assume that "fantastic" hears means "containing fantasy elements" rather than "extraordinary," since I found them fairly uninspired computer art. The whole thing is packaged by Byron Preiss Publications, which explains why the books seem more "product" than "book"--a share-cropped world in a series. %T Predator %A William F. Wu %C New York %D April 1993 %I AvoNova %O paperback, US$4.99 %G ISBN 0-380-76510-1 %P 244pp %S Isaac Asimov's Robots in Time %V 1 %T Marauder %A William F. Wu %C New York %D July 1993 %I AvoNova %O paperback, US$4.99 %G ISBN 0-380-76511-X %P 243pp %S Isaac Asimov's Robots in Time %V 2 %T Warrior %A William F. Wu %C New York %D 1993 %I AvoNova %O paperback, US$4.99 %G ISBN 0-380-76512-8 %P 243pp %S Isaac Asimov's Robots in Time %V 3 %T Dictator %A William F. Wu %C New York %D February 1994 %I AvoNova %O paperback, US$4.99 %G ISBN 0-380-76510-1 %P 230pp %S Isaac Asimov's Robots in Time %V 4 -- Evelyn C. Leeper | +1 908 957 2070 | ecl@mtgpfs1.att.com / Evelyn.Leeper@att.com "Remember, high-tech means breaks down next week, while cutting edge means breaks down this afternoon. -Bruce Sterling