I remember reading that ages ago, the only thing I can still recall was that some of the woman had teeth in their vag's. Not the kind of thing you're likely to forget...I'm (re)reading the Exile saga by Julian May. At the end of Non-born king atm.
I remember reading that ages ago, the only thing I can still recall was that some of the woman had teeth in their vag's. Not the kind of thing you're likely to forget...I'm (re)reading the Exile saga by Julian May. At the end of Non-born king atm.
I will admit I'm perplexed by this book. There's a lot going on at the same time as there's very little action, and a dense cloud of unarticulated identities. The questions of identity and perception, originating from and reflecting back upon the self as well as piercing one from an outside source, are the central concerns of the story, and in problematizing common conceptions of these ideas, the narrative itself becomes problematic, approaching meta-narrative and introducing other tangential elements like the questions of authorial identity and intent, and the duality of our own voyeuristic tendencies - watching because we are desperate to be watched ourselves, or else because we're incapable of it.
Linking a lot of these themes is a muted acknowledgment that Japanese society (or perhaps any form of Western-style culture) underlies the tensions at work in the novel. Lurking somewhere just below the horizon, or perhaps looming above and out of sight of the observation window, is the world at large from which the box man has excommunicated himself. This particular aspect is addressed more thoroughly in The Ark Sakura (where one might recognize a re-imagined box man, fake box man, doctor, and nurse), but even here it is significant that the box man withdraws into his corrugated shell, where everything essential in life is literally within arm's reach, where one is responsible to no one but him or her self, and where typical social desires can be sublimated into the dualism of misanthropy and self-loathing.
Essentially, it's about a man who chooses to live in a box. Supposedly.
Keeping my inner nerd happy and dropped the 8 books of the "Fate of the Jedi" series on my Kindle
Just finished "The First Law" series by Joe Abercrombie
http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Blade-I...=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1331908469&sr=1-2
First book of the Kingkiller series by Phillip Rothfuss "The name of the wind". Quite a good read, only problem may be that first book 2007, second 2011, third....?
I will carry one reading the first then I have the new Alastair Reynolds book to read. Once my head is fucked by that the 2nd book might as well be "Mr Messy"!The only problem with reading the first one? is the massive let down on the second tbhI really hope he gets back to form for the third one!
I will carry one reading the first then I have the new Alastair Reynolds book to read. Once my head is fucked by that the 2nd book might as well be "Mr Messy"!
Currently reading Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.
I haven't seen Blade Runner yet so this is all new to me. It's a fantastic book, it really is. Approaching 2/3rds through.
Is all Dick this good? (hrhr)