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The Modular Man

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Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1992

Pages
  
306 pp

Originally published
  
1992

Genre
  
Science Fiction

Country
  
United States of America

3.9/5
Goodreads

Publisher
  
Bantam Books

Media type
  
Print

ISBN
  
0-553-29559-4

Author
  
Roger MacBride Allen

Cover artist
  
Bruce Jensen

The Modular Man httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen11fThe

Similar
  
The Ocean of Years, The Ring of Charon, The Depths of Time, Final Inquiries, The Shores of Tomorrow

The Modular Man is a science fiction novel by American writer Roger MacBride Allen. It is the fourth in the Next Wave series.

Plot summary

The novel concerns the issue of personhood and what it takes to be considered a member of the moral universe. There are three main characters: Herbert the vacuum cleaner, who is modified by his owner, David Bailey, a scientist who specializes in figuring out how to "mindload". Mindloading is the act of a human downloading their mind into a machine. A successful mindload entails the death of the human. It is a way for humans to become immortal, if only in the form of vacuum cleaner.

The book begins with the arrest of Herbert, the vacuum cleaner, for David's murder. David's wife, Suzanne Jantille, is a trial attorney who is a quadriplegic as a result of a car crash that also paralyzed her husband. She lives through a "Remote person" who has all human senses except for the ability to feel by touch. She can guide the remote person through a helmet attached to her "bio body" and retrieves all "video and audio" signals through the remote. She can function as a whole human being, but the outside world notices that she is a remote—and does not approve.

Suzanne defends Herbie, with the help of an astute journalist and a police officer who has access to documents that she wouldn't otherwise. The book ends with a recognition of David’s humanity due to the ultimate confusion in the courtroom. It also ends with the death of Suzanne’s bio-body, and in turn, her ultimate death.

References

The Modular Man Wikipedia


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