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Teranesia. (1999)

von Greg Egan

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6772334,008 (3.39)9
TERANESIA is set in 2012. Prabir Suresh is nine years old and the son of two scientists specialising in entomology. They live on an otherwise uninhabited island in a remote part of the Indonesian peninsula. The island has no real name, but Prabir calls it Teranesia and populates it with imaginary creatures even stranger than the evolutionarily puzzling butterflies that his parents are studying. His world falls apart when civil war kills his parents and leaves him to look after his infant sister. Eighteen years later, rumours of bizarre new species of plants and animals being discovered in the peninsula that was their childhood home draw Prabir's sister back to the island - Prabir cannot bear for her to have gone out alone and he follows, persuading a pharmaceutical researcher to take him along as a guide. Prabir's sister and the researcher succeed in isolating the gene responsible for these new mutations - the T-gene promises that any form of life on Teranesia will out compete those in the outside world. When Prabir himself is infected with a virus carrying this T-gene the bulk of the scientists on Teransia want him dead - the ultimate quarantine that will safeguard humanity as they know it.… (mehr)
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A different style to my usual reading.
I stick to science fiction and fantasy - usually set in alternative or universal or future settings.
This is a sf that is sent in the "normal" Earth world and concentrates on Biology as its plausible science fiction.
Interesting real main character, but I can never get used to how quickly stories wrap up. ( )
  stubooks | Apr 4, 2024 |
239
  freixas | Mar 31, 2023 |
I was extremely into this book until the last 5 pages or so. It felt like Jurassic Park meets John Varley. There was more than one point when I had to set the book down, stand up, and walk around my apartment for a little bit, just to shake off the emotions I was able to feel in connection with Prabir. I loved the way Prabir came out to the reader by simply growing up and having a partner. I loved the way this story would be unrecognizably different with a straight protagonist--it's an indelibly queer story, and I like that. Then Madhusree talked to a test tube and it understood her, and I was just left wondering if Egan should have shut the manuscript in a desk drawer for a few years before trying to finish it. ( )
  pearcare | Jan 16, 2023 |
Not his best work. I liked the shift from astrophysics and technophilia to biology, but even though the main evolutionary puzzle/MacGuffin in the book was fairly interesting, a good cross between quantum computing and evolution, I thought Prabir was one of the weakest protagonists Egan has ever written, and the emotional logic behind his decisions was as incoherent as it was annoying. Prabir was especially irritating in the beginning of the book, when he was an unconvincing wunderkind; it was the least believable child character I've read since I suffered through a Don DeLillo novel. It really seemed like Egan got it into his head that he would write an Indian main character just because he could, because though his heritage plays a very minor role in the story, it's fairly incidental and ultimately doesn't add much. Also, maybe I only noticed this because I had read Luminous so recently, but Prabir's attitude towards his homosexuality ("aggressive ambivalence", if that makes sense) is almost exactly the same as the attitude of the protagonist in the short story Cocoon. My final complaint: the post-modern parody sections might have seemed funny when they were being written, but they provoke barely a chuckle at this point. I think this book could have been stronger if Egan had tossed a few more ideas in (the genetic changes described could have been much more dramatic and cooler; speaking of Luminous again, the setting of the Chaff short story would have been a much better choice) and if he had made the main character less of a tool. Time for a break from Egan, sadly. ( )
  aaronarnold | May 11, 2021 |
I love Greg Egan's novels, and hard sci-fi, but just didn't like this book. It started out painfully slow, and while there was eventually some interesting content toward the end, I just didn't enjoy it or get much out of it. I'd still probably have read it for completion purposes (as I'd eventually like to have read all of Egan's work), but this is not one to prioritize. (Lots of internal dialogue with a character I didn't really like; lots of details about really boring things; the interesting science part could have been described in about 3 pages, and deserved a lot more.) The ending was rushed, but whatever. Maybe the main character was "realistic" as a fairly normal or plausible person (very intelligent, but lots of self doubt and generally pathetic), but not someone I particularly empathize with.

One of the more interesting parts of the book was the takedown of postmodern/transgressive/etc. dialogue in the social sciences. This might seem be a bit too much like kicking a retarded puppy, but it's more like excising cancer.

(This was the Audible version; the narrator is far better than the narrator of Egan's first books.) ( )
  octal | Jan 1, 2021 |
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» Andere Autoren hinzufügen (3 möglich)

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Greg EganHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Gudynas, PeterUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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The island was too small for human habitation,
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Wikipedia auf Englisch (1)

TERANESIA is set in 2012. Prabir Suresh is nine years old and the son of two scientists specialising in entomology. They live on an otherwise uninhabited island in a remote part of the Indonesian peninsula. The island has no real name, but Prabir calls it Teranesia and populates it with imaginary creatures even stranger than the evolutionarily puzzling butterflies that his parents are studying. His world falls apart when civil war kills his parents and leaves him to look after his infant sister. Eighteen years later, rumours of bizarre new species of plants and animals being discovered in the peninsula that was their childhood home draw Prabir's sister back to the island - Prabir cannot bear for her to have gone out alone and he follows, persuading a pharmaceutical researcher to take him along as a guide. Prabir's sister and the researcher succeed in isolating the gene responsible for these new mutations - the T-gene promises that any form of life on Teranesia will out compete those in the outside world. When Prabir himself is infected with a virus carrying this T-gene the bulk of the scientists on Teransia want him dead - the ultimate quarantine that will safeguard humanity as they know it.

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