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A carregar... Getting to Know Youpor David Marusek
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Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se irá gostar deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. https://speculiction.blogspot.com/2023/10/review-of-getting-to-know-you-by-david... ( ) Short fiction is a marvelous venue for practicing elements of craft and for trying out new things, and the pieces in this collection document my development as a writer,” David Marusek says in his introduction to his first collection. That’s very apparent in the five (of a total of ten) stories that are set in the world of Marusek’s recent novel, Counting Heads. While well-written and jam-packed with ideas, they seem mostly to be vehicles for exploring that world, and have the self-referential feel of artists’ studies: accomplished works that don’t really stand on their own. This is especially true of “Getting To Know You,” which is built around a signature piece of Marusek technology; “Cabbages and Kale,” which illustrates a pivotal historical event; and “A Boy in Cathyland,” an outtake from a longer work that reads like the fragment it is. The two novellas have more independent presence. “We Were Out of Our Minds With Joy” portrays two people struggling to maintain a relationship amid the technological complexity of the far future; the world building is dazzling, but its extravagant strangeness places the characters in situations so alien that it’s difficult to feel sympathy for them. In “The Wedding Album,” a simulated bride and groom, created at the peak of their originals’ wedding-day happiness, witness drastic changes over the course of periodic re-awakenings–the dissolution of the real-life version of their marriage, the breakdown of society. Of the five pieces set in the same world, this one works best, perhaps because artificial Anne and Ben are as much strangers to Marusek’s bizarre futurescape as the reader is. Of the stories that don’t share a world, “VTV” is a nastily effective piece about media voyeurism gone amok, and “Listen to Me” is an equally cynical exploration of the ugliest aspects of cabin fever. “Yurek Rutz. Yurek Rutz. Yurek Rutz” puts an amusing spin on a tale about one man’s peculiar idea of immortality. The very short “The Earth Is on the Mend,” in which a lone survivor of disaster debates how to deal with a new neighbor, packs a lot of story into a few pages, and another short, “My Morning Glory,” takes the idea of personalized computer utilities to its farthest limit. A consistently challenging, if not always satisfying, collection. sem críticas | adicionar uma crítica
Not since William Gibson and Bruce Sterling galvanized science fiction in the 1980s has the emergence of a new writer been heralded with such acclaim as that attending David Marusek, whose brilliant first novel, Counting Heads, appeared to rave reviews in 2005. But Marusek did not come out of nowhere. Aficionados of the genre had already taken note of his groundbreaking short fiction: masterfully written, profoundly thought-out examinations of futures so real they seemed virtually inevitable. Now, in this collection of ten short stories, Marusek's fierce imagination and dazzling extrapolative gifts are on full display. Five of the stories, including the Sturgeon Award-winning "The Wedding Album," a shattering look at the unintended human consequences of advanced technology, are set in the same future as Counting Heads. All ten showcase Marusek' s talent for literate, provocative science fiction of the very highest order. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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