Sewer, Gas & Electric: The Public Works Trilogy: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[The Croc Is Ticking]]: Once Meisterbrau swallows a cellphone.
* [[The Croc Is Ticking]]: Once Meisterbrau swallows a cellphone.
* [[The Comically Serious]]: Befitting her philosophy, Artificial Ayn Rand has great difficulties understanding jokes.
* [[The Comically Serious]]: Befitting her philosophy, Artificial Ayn Rand has great difficulties understanding jokes.
* [[Death By Irony]]: There are one hundred of them. Orchestrated by the [[Big Bad]].]]
* [[Death by Irony]]: There are one hundred of them. Orchestrated by the [[Big Bad]].]]
* [[Everything's Even Worse With Sharks]]: Mutant sharks especially.
* [[Everything's Even Worse with Sharks]]: Mutant sharks especially.
* [[Eye Scream]]: The "Shiva's Heat weapon". {{spoiler|It consists of a laser, which scans the landscape for reflecting surfaces like binoculars or glasses, and in case of a discovery is tuned to full power to burn out the eyes of anyone in range.}}
* [[Eye Scream]]: The "Shiva's Heat weapon". {{spoiler|It consists of a laser, which scans the landscape for reflecting surfaces like binoculars or glasses, and in case of a discovery is tuned to full power to burn out the eyes of anyone in range.}}
* [[Flying Seafood Special]]: {{spoiler|Meisterbrau eventually unfolds wings.}}
* [[Flying Seafood Special]]: {{spoiler|Meisterbrau eventually unfolds wings.}}

Revision as of 10:10, 9 April 2014

Sewer, Gas & Electric: The Public Works Trilogy opens up with a crazy businessman building the tower of Babel in New York City, and a hapeless new hire to the Department of Sewers being eaten by a sewer-dwelling mutant great white shark. It's 2023, and New York is on the brink of a giant earthquake, and that's the least of the city's problems. Penned by Matt Ruff, it's a novel of ecoterrorism, mad AIs, absurdly spacious sewers and an AI construct of Ayn Rand spouting objectivist philosophy and generally having melting down arguments with the rest of the cast.

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This book provides examples of the following tropes: