Dave Langford reviewed
Blood Music for
White Dwarf #79. He stated that "The finale is magnificent. The only problem is that it's nigglingly close to the conclusion reached by an author extrapolating from a different start-point:
Arthur C. Clarke in ''
Childhood's End''. But Bear, I think does it better – and goes beyond even Clarke. Strongly recommended." Martin Lewis of the
SF Site writes in a 2002 review, "For a novel that moves so quickly you might expect some fudge for the sake of plot, but the ideas that are presented are fully explored and the characters are all well drawn... Bear also succeeds in pulling off probably the hardest task in SF, depicting a believable strongly superhuman AI." He adds, "As can be expected, Bear explicitly references both
Frankenstein and
Prometheus. However, although the novel charts the demise of humanity,
Blood Music is optimistic in tone. Despite the prejudices of the masses
Frankenstein's monster is triumphant. The noocytes, cultured in Ulam's body, are genuinely better than humans and happy to invite them to share this new future." Placing
Blood Music among its contemporaries, specifically the
cyberpunk fiction of the 1980s, Lewis calls it "a modern classic" in its handling of
Transhumanism, which explores ideas such as
genetic engineering and
translation of consciousness. Lewis concludes, "To this day, it remains the defining novel of "
wet" nanotechnology". Drawing parallel literary connections, Thomas Christensen (in a 1999 retrospective review) calls it "a DNA based Frankenstein's
fantastic voyage-story for the last quarter of the twentieth century. The story may seem a bit simplistic and stereotypical these days (the mad scientist and the ignorant
environmental activists)," yet it offers "a fairly well written and fairly interesting story about the wonders that bioengineering can give us, if we use it right and the horrors it can bring us if we aren't careful." The Worlds Without End site calls the novel both "suspenseful and grotesque" but also "compelling and exciting... especially considering the ideas that it touches upon (E.g.
genetic memory, consciousness, & reality)." The reviewer muses, "I think that some consider this to fall into the
horror genre, but I don't know if I agree fully. Suspenseful? Sure.
Body horror? Absolutely. But I don't think that the horror elements are really the focus. A stunner for sure, highly recommended." The novel won the 1986
Prix Apollo Award, given to the best science fiction novel published in France during the preceding year, under the title
La Musique du sang. It was also nominated for the Nebula Award in 1985 and for the Hugo,
Campbell, and
British Science Fiction Awards in 1986. ==Notes==