The Man Fell to Earth was the Silver Surfer, but that’s
being a bit facetious. I found this slow going at first with its focus on a
future African/Nigerian culture, but I cannot fault the world-building here.
Another thing that slows this down is that habit Gene Wolfe has of getting
characters to tell stories which, to me, adds nothing and is merely a page
filler. But as I persevered, and the far-future human turned up occupied by a
symbiotic semi-AI, it did engage me. You got the ‘cruelty of Africa’ here and
the sense of a future of environmental disaster combined with space elevators,
cities in orbit and matter printing. All SF readers are after that sensawunda
and this story certainly has it. I noted in comments about this story that the
bad guys were too one-dimensionally bad but didn’t think that the case. To me the
good guys were too good, too angelic, with too much in the way of hugging and
moral probity. It also suffered from the kryptonite factor: I never felt the
protagonist was in any danger because he was just too powerful. Also, the
high-note terminal conflict then progressed into the kind of wind-down you get
at the end of LoTR, which was a little wearing.
"Lyrical prose and imaginative world-building . . . the book is gripping, powerful and frequently impressive . . . an ambitious and intelligent work that marks out Chait as a writer worthy of further attention." (Saxon Bullock SFX magazine)
"Richly drawn . . . a smart, ideas-driven novel . . . a promising and ambitious debut." (SCiFiNOW)
"Loved the whole experience as Gavin brought solid world building into the mix alongside cracking pace as well as dialogue that just tripped off the page . . . a great read . . . Magic." (FALCATA TIMES)
"Highly readable . . . Chait should be applauded for managing that all important trick of getting you to keep turning that page until there aren't any left . . . smart, ideas-led science fiction with a literary fiction bent." (STARBURST magazine)
However, this
is a big book and I read it from cover to cover so there’s that. The writing is
engaging and you do care about the characters. It may well be that it simply
wasn’t to my taste. I tend to grimace at environmental disaster SF in a future
where ‘advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic’. It may will
be to your taste so why not give it a try? Here's what some others think:
"Refreshingly different . . . exhilarating . . . a compulsively readable, life-affirming tale told in direct, lambent prose, and Chait does a masterful job of juxtaposing a traditional African setting with a convincing depiction of a far-future alien society." (Eric Brown GUARDIAN)
"Refreshingly different . . . exhilarating . . . a compulsively readable, life-affirming tale told in direct, lambent prose, and Chait does a masterful job of juxtaposing a traditional African setting with a convincing depiction of a far-future alien society." (Eric Brown GUARDIAN)
"Lyrical prose and imaginative world-building . . . the book is gripping, powerful and frequently impressive . . . an ambitious and intelligent work that marks out Chait as a writer worthy of further attention." (Saxon Bullock SFX magazine)
"Richly drawn . . . a smart, ideas-driven novel . . . a promising and ambitious debut." (SCiFiNOW)
"Loved the whole experience as Gavin brought solid world building into the mix alongside cracking pace as well as dialogue that just tripped off the page . . . a great read . . . Magic." (FALCATA TIMES)
"Highly readable . . . Chait should be applauded for managing that all important trick of getting you to keep turning that page until there aren't any left . . . smart, ideas-led science fiction with a literary fiction bent." (STARBURST magazine)
No comments:
Post a Comment