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  Free eBook Version of Ventus
Posted by Karl on Monday September 17, @10:45AM

Cover art by Karl Schroeder


A Free Book

To celebrate the publication of Queen of Candesce, I've decided to re-release my first novel as a free eBook. You can download it from this page. Ventus was first published by Tor Books in 2000, and and you can still buy it; to everyone who would just like to sample my work, I hope you enjoy this free version.

I've released this book under a Creative Commons license, which means you can read it and distribute it freely, but not make derivative works or sell it. (Update: I now have all the eBook formats I need. Mobipocket is included thanks to Dave Marsh, Alex Swavely, Derek Benner, Claus Maier, Ben Henley and Dennis McCunney. The eReader format was supplied by Zachary Brewster-Geisz, although I had to pick among several equally good versions in the end because other people had also been converting to this format. Derek Benner contributed the Sony and FBReader versions. Apologies if I've missed anyone, it's been a whirlwind day.)

About Ventus

Ventus is a novel of information apocalypse set in the far future. For a thousand years the sovereign Winds have maintained the delicate ecological balance of the terraformed planet Ventus. Now an alien force threatens to wrest control of the terraforming system away from the Winds...

Jordan Mason, a young tradesman, is thrust into the midst of an ancient galactic conflict when he becomes the only human on Ventus who can locate the source of the alien threat. But will he side with the Winds, who have brutally suppressed technological development among the human colonists of Ventus? Or will he throw in his lot with an entity that may be planning to remake Ventus in its own, deathly image? Ventus incorporates ideas about nanotechnology, terraforming, and information theory in an epic tale of war, tragic love, betrayal and transcendence.

Reviews

Publishers Weekly:

Although Aurora Award-winner Schroeder is probably best known for his fantasy fiction, this novel, his first large-scale SF work, should greatly expand his reputation. A thousand years ago, highly advanced artificial intelligences (AIs) called Winds terraformed the planet Ventus into a comfortable world for human settlementDbut something went wrong, and the Winds never relinquished control. Now they rule as gods, using their "mecha" creatures to squelch anythingDor anyoneDwho creates imbalance in their perfectly groomed environment. Enter young Jordan Mason, whose visions show him dreamlike images of far-distant events that are somehow linked to the Winds. But Jordan only begins to realize the truth after he meets two off-worlders, the assassin Calandria and her partner, Axel. Jordan's visions link him to Armiger, a spy created by a megalomaniac AI called 3340. Though Calandria "destroyed" 3340, she fears Armiger carries the seeds to resurrect the entity. Jordan's link offers the only hope of finding Armiger, but there are other forces at work as well. Civil war fomented by the Winds threatens to overthrow mad Queen Galas, the most egalitarian ruler in Ventus's history. And in a distant system called the Archipelago, Calandria's boss, a rival AI, is sending warships to decimate Ventus and insure 3340's demiseDpermanently. Canadian Schroeder handles his large cast of characters with impressive dexterity. Fans of the high-tech foundation and grand world-building of Iain M. Banks and Ken MacLeod will feel right at home here, as will anyone else who appreciates a challenging, original story." (Dec. 18) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
Norman Spinrad in Asimov's:
Karl Schroeder herein, at least for my money, has done more on both a technological level and a literary level with what is by now the hoary cliché of nanotechnology than anyone has before, with the possible exception of Greg Bear in Blood Music, and particularly where the technological and literary levels cross in the territory of metaphysical speculation on the question of where and when and how being arises out of artifact.
Booklist:
ordan Mason of the planet Ventus comes from a long line of stoneworkers, and he has a clear understanding of his place in his world. He is subservient to the aristocracy, who in turn bow to the Winds, who control the weather, plant and animal life, and human undertakings. Lately, Jordan has had troubling visions, in which his immediate surroundings are blotted out by a different sky and a different forest, and he sees through another man's eyes. One night, searching in the forest for his sister, Jordan meets captivating Calandria May, who says she can explain his visions if he will help track Armiger, through whose eyes he has gazed. Armiger is a rogue artificial intelligence (AI), sent to Ventus to co-opt the Winds, which are also AIs, into enslaving humans and creating a powerful, ruthless world-mind. Through Armiger's eyes, Jordan sees how his interactions with an independent, tender peasant woman and a fierce, lonely queen are changing the AI's cold objectives. As Jordan and Calandria close in on Armiger, they see that the Winds are divided into pro-human and antihuman camps. Wondering whether he is on the right side, Jordan uses his visionary power to speak directly to the Winds. A final battle for Ventus brings human generals, intelligent moons, and a roving off-planet archaeologist onstage. Although strictly hard sf, full of technology, Schroeder's novel is so rich in character and emotion that it feels like classic fantasy. Roberta Johnson
New York Review of Science Fiction:
If there is such a thing as a pagan sf novel, Ventus is it. Science has placed humankind at the center of the universe, as discoverers, observers, and definers of the essence of everything else that exists. The creators of the Ventus Winds challenged that claim of definition. So, too, does the author.
New York Times Book Review:
Deeply Satisfying
Kirkus Reviews:
Delightful and engaging, both intellectually and viscerally: a superb achievement.



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  • Articles on Ventus News
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  • Download the Ventus eBook

    I've released my first novel, Ventus, as a free ebook. Download it here:
    As an online webpage
    As a zipped HTML file
    As a PDF
    As a MobiPocket file
    As an MS Reader file
    As an eReader file (thanks to Zachary Brewster-Geisz)
    As a Sony PRS-500 file*
    As an FBReader file*
    *Thanks to Derek Benner

    This novel is released under a Creative Commons license. Tor Books still retains world print publication rights.

    Oh and I had to be reminded that I have a paypal account people can contribute to. (Thanks, Ralph!)
    So here's the Tip jar:

    Any amount you donate will help me write my next book.

    The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them.
    ( Discuss )

    Over 10 comments listed. Printing out index only.
    Re: Free eBook Version of Ventus
    by Skar on Monday September 17, @03:43PM
    Mr. Schroeder, I read about your release of this free version of your book Ventus over on the Whatever. I've got a question. I notice you've got the cover art included in the PDF version at least. Did you have to get permission from the artist to use the art in the digital version? I promise I'm neither a copyright lawyer looking for a client nor am I trying to start a copyright argument. I'm just curious about the mechanics of the creative commons movement as it relates to books.
    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Free eBook Version of Ventus
    by Janice in GA on Monday September 17, @04:54PM
    I don't know if you care to release the book out into the wild, but the folks over at Manybooks.net have some kind of engine that lets you choose from many formats for downloading ebooks. If not, maybe someone there can help. I'm a Mobipocket fan, myself.
    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Free eBook Version of Ventus
    by Simon Haynes on Monday September 17, @06:05PM
    Link shared - hope it helps!

    Cheers
    Simon
    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Mobipocket/Palm Version of Ventus
    by Chip Anderson on Monday September 17, @08:43PM
    Mobipocket has no problem converting from the PDF or HTML formats posted. Just open Mobipocket and drop the file onto the Mobipocket window. From there, unless you have MS-Vista, Mobipocket can dump it to your Palm PDA. If you have MS-Vista, you can copy the resulting .prc file from the "My eBooks" directory.

    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Free eBook Version of Ventus
    by Mike Brotherton on Monday September 17, @10:30PM
    Good luck with this, Karl! I got about as many downloads of Star Dragon as I did mass market sales, which can only help the new novel. I'm pitching Ventus on my blog today.


    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Free eBook Version of Ventus
    by martin t. on Monday September 17, @11:52PM
    thank you, i really wanted to read this book but sadly it is out of print and it is to expensive to get it in germany. no i am able to enjoy it, next purchase will be lady of mazes.
    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Free eBook Version of Ventus
    by martin t. on Tuesday September 18, @01:46AM
    i live in germany and prefer to read in english, it is a good practice and it is the the language the author has chosen for whatever reason. often a translation does not deliver the same effect as the original work. at the moment the book is available through resellers at amazon.de for app. 35€+10€ for shipping (app. 60$). i will read this free book, but i prefer a print. will this book be reprinted in the foreseeable future?
    [ Reply to this ]
    tip jar?
    by Ralph Giles on Tuesday September 18, @12:00PM
    Hooray! Thank you for doing this. I've been looking unsuccessfully for a copy of Ventus for some time.

    Do you have a paypal account where we could send a thank you?

    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Free eBook Version of Ventus
    by Janice in GA on Tuesday September 18, @12:03PM
    The funny thing is, I actually already own this book in a dead tree version. But I haven't read it yet, because I actually prefer to read books on my Palm device. :)
    [ Reply to this ]
    Corrigenda
    by Ralph Giles on Tuesday September 18, @01:35PM

    The great thing about electronic texts is that you can fix all the errors. Post your typos here!

    Part 1, Chapter 3

    "I'm taking Maso east and then north. should be "I'm taking Mason east..." ?


    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Free eBook Version of Ventus
    by Gio on Wednesday September 19, @05:13AM
    Thanks very much for this! I wish more writers would do this.. it does help to sell other books!
    [ Reply to this ]
    Re: Free eBook Version of Ventus
    by Brian Foley on Wednesday September 19, @11:24AM
    &tA few more typos:
    • "infirMarya" (infirmary)
    • " evr " (ever)
    • "because it regarded him as a link to its original programming'." (superfluous final apostrophe);/li>
    • "will be our fist converts" (first)
    • "scrub_grass" (scrub-grass)
    • "body_length" (body-length)

    [ Reply to this ]
    Typo
    by Hawke on Tuesday September 25, @04:26PM
    5th section of part 1, chapter 3: "If he moved it to much" should be "If he moved it too much"

    [ Reply to this ]
    The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them.
    ( Reply )

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