"Joe Haldeman - None So Blind (2)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Haldeman Joe)(This story, which won the Locus and Hugo Awards for "Best Short Story
of 1995," first appeared in Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine.) Author, hiding behind his work None So Blind by Joe Haldeman Copyright ┬й 1995 by Joe Haldeman It all started when Cletus Jefferson asked himself "Why aren't all blind people geniuses?" Cletus was only 13 at the time, but it was a good question, and he would work on it for 14 more years, and then change the world forever. Young Jefferson was a polymath, an autodidact, a nerd literally without peer. He had a chemistry set, a microscope, a telescope, and several computers, some of them bought with paper route money. Most of his income was from education, though: teaching his classmates not to draw to inside straights. even nerdish poker players who can do differential equations in their heads, are immune to Cupid's darts and the sudden storm of testosterone that will accompany those missiles at the age of 13. Cletus knew that he was ugly and his mother dressed him funny. He was also short and pudgy and could not throw a ball in any direction. None of this bothered him until his ductless glands started cooking up chemicals that weren't in his chemistry set. So Cletus started combing his hair and wearing clothes that mismatched according to fashion, but he was still short and pudgy and irregular of feature. He was also the youngest person in his school, even though he was a senior-- and the only black person there, which was a factor in Virginia in 1994. Now if love were sensible, if the sexual impulse was ever tempered by logic, you would expect that Cletus, being Cletus, would assess his situation and go off in search of someone homely. But of course he didn't. He just jingled and |
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