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Lädt ... The dancers of Noyo (Original 1973; 1973. Auflage)von Margaret St. Clair (Autor)
Werk-InformationenThe Dancers of Noyo von Margaret St. Clair (1973)
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Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. Margaret St. Clair wrote some odd stories, but I a pretty sure this is the oddest. Many characters living multiple chunks of different persons lives in what is probably, but not necessarily, a post-holocaust California. This situation may be caused by take-over by our android robot overlords, or over-use of Native American hallucinogens, or a police state seeking to push the population back to some sort of control after the breakdown of society. ( ) Okay, I admit it: I bought this because of the cover art. It was at the Eastercon, and it was like a quid. And I knew I could review it for SF Mistressworks (when I resurrect the blog, that is). I’d previously read a collection by St Clair, and some of her other stories in various women-only anthologies, but I think this was by first novel by her… And it wasn’t at all what I expected. In fact, it read more like Doris Piserchia than the St Clair I’d expected. The story is set after a plague – world-wide possibly, US-wide certainly; it’s hard to tell with US sf novels – in a California which has returned to a tribal agrarian culture. Sort of. The protagonist, Sam McGregor, is a bit of a rebel and doesn’t understand why the young men of the tribe must always dance under the instruction of the android Dancer. So he’s sent on a Grail Quest, which means driving down the coast in search of some sort of epiphany. Instead, he begins to relive the lives of people from earlier times, including a dead young woman being autopsied, and the inventor of the androids. To be honest, not a single bit of this novel made the slightest fucking sense. McGregor meets up with the daughter of the android inventor, who also appears to have something to do with “bone melt”, the disease which basically depopulated California, or the US, or the world. St Clair seems to have no clear idea of her story or what she wants to say. The result is a novel that doesn’t read so much as if St Clair made it up as she went along but more like a novel she couldn’t be bothered to turn into sense. It was her last. Zeige 2 von 2 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
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