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Cosmogramma von Courttia Newland
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Cosmogramma (Original 2021; 2021. Auflage)

von Courttia Newland

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
3110770,532 (3.19)10
"In his exquisite first collection of speculative fiction, Courttia Newland envisages an alternate future as lived by the African diaspora. Kill parties roam the streets of a post-apocalyptic world; a matriarchal race of mer creatures depends on interbreeding with mortals to survive; mysterious seeds appear in cities across the world, growing into the likeness of people in their vicinity. Through transfigured bodies and impossible encounters, Newland brings a sharp, fresh eye to age-old themes of the human capacity for greed, ambition, and self-destruction, but ultimately of our strength and resilience"--Inside jacket.… (mehr)
Mitglied:paradoxosalpha
Titel:Cosmogramma
Autoren:Courttia Newland
Info:Brooklyn : Akashic Books, 2021.
Sammlungen:Gelesen, aber nicht im Besitz
Bewertung:***
Tags:science fiction, lter

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Cosmogramma von Courttia Newland (2021)

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Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
A rather uneven collection of short stories in the sci-fi/speculative fiction vein. There are some real gems here, but you have to dig for them, and the fact that the first stories in the book are arguably the weakest makes getting through this collection a bit of a slog until about the midway point. The worst of the stories are jargon-heavy, with little supportive context or character development. Some read like the beginning of a story yet to be completed; others read like notes for a story not yet written. The best stories, however, are inventive, memorable, character-driven pieces satisfying enough to warrant a revisit. Highlights include "Scarecrow," "You Meets You," "Dark Matters," "Nommo," and the stand-out "Seed," which is likely the strongest story in the collection. Overall, worth reading, but skip around. ( )
  chimaeriste | Jun 10, 2022 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
I didn't think any of the stories in this collection were successful. On the positive side, the author tried his hand at every type of classic sci-fi story, whether it was robots, zombie apocalypse, aliens, or underwater merfolk atlantis. However, and here's the really strong negative, each and every story was incomplete. They fell into two general categories: either 1) the stories felt like prologues or first chapters of longer works, which just stopped right after setup and without exploring any of the concepts they'd introduced, or 2) they read as outlines.

As annoying as it was to finally settle into a story only for it to just STOP (wait, that's IT?) the stories that felt like outlines were unbearable. The opening story is one of those, though not the worst one. They read like, "this happened and then this happened and then this happened and then this happened..."

I really can't recommend this. I appreciate trying all sorts of ideas, but the author didn't have anything at all to say, and the prose style varied greatly from "ok, some time was spent on this one" to "ok, he'll get back to this one later." ( )
  macsbrains | Apr 24, 2022 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
I dream in Blade Runner's setting. I want to love Blade Runner, but no matter how many times I watch this film, I always wish for more worldbuilding. And since it's such a speculative classic, I'm often wary of other speculative stories. I have hardly met a speculative novel that I feel has ENOUGH worldbuilding - I love more more more speculative details. So as soon as I picked up 'Cosmogramma' I had a bit of worry that speculative details in a short story format certainly wouldn't offer up enough detail heaped on that plate for my tastes. But I am proved wrong, Mr. Newland! Despite hesitancy on a speculative short story format, most of these stories worked well for me, though a few could have used a tiny bit more detail to click in my unscientific brain. I like one particular story that seems to combine two sci-fi classics brilliantly, but I wanted more of a reason WHY for the story to really hit home. There is a generous array of science fiction and speculative topics and themes in this collection to keep it fun. Something here is bound to haunt your imagination. I liked that the final story hinted at the first. Some of my favorites here: Scarecrow, You Meets You, Nommo, The Sankofa Principle. I'm very glad I gave this collection a chance. If you like speculative short stories, pick this up! ( )
  booklove2 | Jan 1, 2022 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Overall, I found this collection very uneven; some of the stories are very good, including one that won me over despite using the second-person voice (a style I usually dislike outside of Choose Your Own Adventure type books and N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth trilogy), while others felt like they needed more work to get their point across or just didn’t overcome styles that I dislike. It wasn’t helped that the first four stories fell into the latter category for me.

Many of the stories are informed by the author’s reaction to history and recent events as a Black English man. At least three are directly related to Brexit and the trends it exposed, while at least four more deal with slavery and colonialism. Other stories deal with the impact of environmental crises, not letting a bad decision or experience control your life, and fear of the unknown.

In a number of cases, I couldn’t figure out just what the story’s point was even though there clearly was one beyond entertaining the reader. In some cases, this was no doubt because I don’t have the correct reference points, but there were cases where it felt like the author had felt that certain background details were unnecessary to understanding what was going on, leaving the reader unsure just what key terms mean. In one case, there is an explanation very late in the story, but even in that case it feels a bit too late, and other stories leave key details that might explain what was happening or why completely unknown. In the case of one story, part of the confusion is apparently due to some proofreading errors (at minimum, the phrase ‘seeing my confusion’ is attached to the wrong sentence), a problem which might be corrected when the book is released. Slightly ironically, one story opens with a few details that seem completely irrelevant to anything that follows.

Overall, I think there are too many misses to make the book worth hardcover prices, but the better stories would probably make it worth the price of a cheaper edition. ( )
1 abstimmen Gryphon-kl | Dec 25, 2021 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
The "speculative fiction" of this collection is not hard sf by any stretch; it is not even very scientifically competent. Page 21 in the first story "Percipi" says that rebels living on the dark side of the moon "had survived five years of constant darkness." This howler left me dubious when later stories offered wormhole-based propulsion and other technological leaps. These are also not generally stories with "big ideas" that are breaking conceptual new ground. There are an android uprising, zombie apocalypse (with an Invasion of the Body Snatchers inflection), a cyborg circus, robots tending a generation starship, and other well-worn themes that will be familiar to science fiction readers.

The jacket copy says that the book "envisages an alternate future as lived by the African diaspora." But the individual stories aren't clearly part of any sort of integral future history, and it wasn't until the fifth story "Buck" that there was any clear indication of a principal character's race. There's no question that some of these stories do leverage author Courttia Newland's perspective as a Black Englishman, and two of them use the Nommo spirits of the African Dogon people to characterize what seem to be extraterrestrials. Still, the science fiction element is definitely more consistent through the various stories than racial concerns are.

The title story "Cosmogramma" was all right, but it--like many of these--was little more than a vignette. In any case, I preferred the descriptive snapshot pieces like this one to the chronicle style evident in "Percipi." Since the stories are typically quite short, there are a lot of them, and some of them really are notably strange and interesting. I best enjoyed the ones that incorporated significant elements of weird horror and/or were set closest to our contemporary situation, such as "Dark Matters" and "Link" that have city-dwelling youth encountering some sort of alien intelligence.

I really wanted to like this book, but I found it altogether a mixed bag, and it wasn't one I returned to eagerly story after story. ( )
5 abstimmen paradoxosalpha | Dec 2, 2021 |
Courtttia Newland's Cosmogramma is one eclectic mix of tales. The anthology jumps between thrillers, sci-fi and cosmic horror to tell stories from a world of robot armies, circuses of cyborgs and mysterious, other-worldly happenings. ... Stories across the collection are united by Newland's talent for depicting a world shaped by, and through the eyes of, the African diaspora. In "Nomma", for example, he draws on Malian folklore to create an incredibly moving and engaging story about underwater beings and their quest for survival.

... Overall, the combination of excellent world and character building and the rising intensity of each story as the book progresses means Cosmogramma is hard to put down. Stories feel almost unfinished, often leaving the reader on highly emotional cliffhangers, but this is one of the best things about Newland's storytelling. The unfinished feel gve me time to reconsider what exactly might next in a world I was introduced to just 10 pages prior, and kept me engaged and in suspense for the majority of the anthology. Cosmogramma is a collection that you will want to read again and again, both to better understand the comples storylines and to simply enjoy the African-futuristic worlds that Newlands has created.
hinzugefügt von Cynfelyn | bearbeitenNew Scientist, Robyn Chowdhury (Nov 13, 2021)
 
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In some far off place
Many light years in space,
I'll wait for you.
Where human feet have never trod,
where human eyes have never seen.
I'll build a world of abstract dreams
And wait for you.
--Sun Ra
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For Brook Stephenson, who gave the inspiration. And FlyLo, who gave the music,.
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We saw it after dinner, nationwide on a weeknight.
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"In his exquisite first collection of speculative fiction, Courttia Newland envisages an alternate future as lived by the African diaspora. Kill parties roam the streets of a post-apocalyptic world; a matriarchal race of mer creatures depends on interbreeding with mortals to survive; mysterious seeds appear in cities across the world, growing into the likeness of people in their vicinity. Through transfigured bodies and impossible encounters, Newland brings a sharp, fresh eye to age-old themes of the human capacity for greed, ambition, and self-destruction, but ultimately of our strength and resilience"--Inside jacket.

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Courttia Newlands Buch Cosmogramma wurde im Frührezensenten-Programm LibraryThing Early Reviewers angeboten.

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