
Han Song's "hospital" Trilogy
by Han Song
About This Novel
Han Song is a representative Chinese science fiction writer and is known as the "Philip Dick of contemporary China". His new novel "Hospital" trilogy explores the medical secrets of the near future era of artificial intelligence and ponders the biggest changes in life and human nature. It is the culmination of Han Song's dystopian ideological system and is enough to rewrite the history of Chinese science fiction. The first "Hospital" put forward the subversive values of the "pharmaceutical era", "Seeing a doctor is first of all a matter of faith; life is a treatment package." The second part, "Exorcism," further depicts a brief history of future patients in the "drug war" and outlines the evolution of medical artificial intelligence. As the final chapter of the trilogy, "The Undead" constructs the medical society of the Mars Hospital on the Day of Resurrection. The rise and collapse of the "pharmaceutical empire" hints at the secret of life's "original death or primary death", and the end of the world must be unspeakable. Han Song's novels are profound representations of reality, and his critical spirit and literary imagination are directly inherited from Lu Xun. This hospital trilogy, which uses disease as a metaphor, further embodies the "dark consciousness" in Chinese science fiction. "Hospital" puts forward the subversive values of the "pharmaceutical era", "Seeing a doctor is first and foremost a matter of faith; life is a treatment package." "Exorcism" depicts a brief history of future patients in the "drug war" and outlines the evolution of medical artificial intelligence. "Undead" builds the "pharmaceutical empire" of the Mars Hospital on the Day of Resurrection, and explores the secret of the "original death or primary death" of life. Science fiction reshapes the view of life and death, and the world must be unspeakable in the end. "The electronic version does not come with a postcard, I hope readers will forgive me."
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Official(1)Scraped 11d ago
Why are there no book reviews? I think it's a good book.
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Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 11d ago
Why are there no book reviews? I think it's a good book.
