Dancing in Dreamtime

Dancing in Dreamtime
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Break Away Book Club Edition

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
iran گزارش تخلف

فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2016

نویسنده

Scott Russell Sanders

شابک

9780253022592
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

June 13, 2016
For this Breakaway Book Club edition, essayist and novelist Sanders (Divine Animal) assembles revised versions of his contemplative and melancholy stories lamenting the degradation of Earth. Written in the 1980s, the prescient stories explore obesity, habitat loss, and extinction. In “Artist of Hunger,” the obese titular character paints food murals for companies that provide slenderizing operations. In the horror tale “Anatomy Lesson,” a mutant’s skeleton transforms a student. Several stories adapted for Sanders’s novel The Engineer of Beasts follow people living in domed cities after the Great Extinction, cut off from wilderness and building mechanical animals for circuses. “Dancing in Dreamtime” brings indigenous shamans into orbit to survey the damage and heal Earth with dance and song. Later stories visit humans on exoplanets discovering supposedly extinct birds and singing trees. Out of place in this collection is the standout fantasy “First Journey of Jason Moss,” a gentle story of discovery as Jason travels a present-day Earth. With so many cautionary stories of near-future doom and gloom, a few more hopeful insights would have lifted spirits. Agent: John W. Wright, John W. Wright Agency.



Kirkus

June 15, 2016
A short story collection wrestling with modern isolation and dystopic futures, from an author also known for nonfiction essays about conservation and nature.Sanders (Divine Animal, 2014, etc.) begins with "The Anatomy Lesson," a horror story about transformation in a poorly defined academic setting. "The First Journey of Jason Moss" describes a nebbishy man's unlikely midlife blossoming into a world traveler and solver-of-everyone's-problems. "The Artist of Hunger" is about an artist's rebellion against (somewhat cartoonish) villainous corporate patrons and their manufactured culture of greed. "The Engineer of Beasts" is the first story explicitly set in Sanders' Enclosure universe, a dystopia of bubble cities sealed against Earth's pollution, more thoroughly explored in his 1985 novel Terrarium. Despite traces of a too-cute whimsy, Sanders hits his stride as he explores what happens when one of the Enclosure's "disneys" (an inspired coinage for artificial parks within the cities) goes haywire. Sanders invigorates the "domed cities" trope for the last 10 stories, which chronicle humanity's retreat into the Enclosure...and their subsequent need to escape their refuge and reconnect with their ruined natural world and with one another. In the far future of the setting, our species reaches other, less spoiled planets. The two best stories take place here: "The Audubon Effect," in which a team of scientists puzzles through the impossible appearance of extinct avians; and the claustrophobic and creepy "The Land Where Songtrees Grow," a rescue mission whose members are in risk of losing their own minds. "Travels in the Interior" is also strong, sharply examining both celebrity culture and colonization/exploitation through two brothers whose expeditions on alien planets are televised.Sanders is at his best when he leaves humor behind to tell stories with big ideas; fortunately, over half the stories here do so, despite a shaky start.

COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.




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