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If millions pay today just to watch
two men fight for a champion's crown, tens of millions
will pay for the additional thrill of being actually
within the mind and body of the boxers themselves, to
experience in person the tension and combat, to throw
themselves into punch and counter-punch without
having to feel the pain. This is the story of Ryan Hart's final fight.
His was not the publicized name of the boxer. Nobody knew
him but the insiders, because he was the man who operated
the challenger, whose mind handled the boxer's muscles,
whose agonies were never felt by the E-linked millions,
but who would be for a few dozen minutes the embodiment
of half the human race!
It's a novel of two unforgettable
battles one the seen and obvious, the other the fight of
a single solitary man to regain honor and self-respect in
a world he had ceased to believe in.
Cover art by Vincent Di
Fate
Published
in 1976 by DAW.
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The best man always wins - the best handler
that is... The boxers slugging it out in the ring were
just holographs, patterns of light, but to millions of
Network viewers they were genuine flesh and blood. They looked
real, and with a E-link between the handler controlling
the sim and the viewer's mind you could actually feel
them emotionally - their excitement, power, anger... even
their fear and crushing sense of defeat.
After the fight, when the holos faded out and
the handlers took off their headsets, the boxers ceased
to exist, There were no scars to heal, except mental ones
- and Network wasn't interested in things like that.
But for years one handler had been tortured
by painful memories of a previous fight - so much so,
that when he came back to the ring for the last time he
was fighting not just to win, but to regain honour and
self-respect in a world he had ceased to believe in.
Cover art by Tony Roberts
Published
in 1977 by Fontana.
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Brian Stableford:
The Mind Riders.Cast of Characters:
Ryan Hart, Paul Herrera, Jimmy Schell, Dr
Maria Kenrian, Velasco Valerian, Ray Angeli, Stella
Valerian, Curman, Carl Wolff.
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Review:
This book is going to
be re-issued by Cosmos Books and that is great news,
because although it was originally published in 1976, it
feels frighteningly up-to-date.
Ryan Hart was
a boxer who was showing promise just as the sport was transferring
from the ring to a simulated environment, which had the advantage
of being able to transmit the emotional experience of the contestants.
Unfortunately
for Hart, he doesn't broadcast his feelings well and his career is
sidelined; leaving him bitter and making a living playing the fall
guy in cheap adventure series.
At 3am one morning, Ryan is summoned to Velasco Valerian's
mansion to talk about becoming a boxer again.
Valerian has just watched champion Paul Herrera beat his eighteenth
opponent and for private reasons, is desperate for someone to beat
him.
Determined not to have his life taken over, Ryan has to fight
for his independence and to stop his agenda being swamped by Valerian's.
Coming after Man in a Cage, this story is
much more accessible. The story is reminiscent of Robert
Silverberg's Thorns, though quite considerably less
downbeat.
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