Best of All Possible Worlds, The

mp3 cd

Publicerades 19 juli 2016 av Audible Studios on Brilliance Audio, Audible Studios on Brilliance.

ISBN:
978-1-5226-8366-7
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Karen Lord’s debut novel, the multiple-award-winning Redemption in Indigo, announced the appearance of a major new talent—a strong, brilliantly innovative voice fusing Caribbean storytelling traditions and speculative fiction with subversive wit and incisive intellect. Compared by critics to such heavyweights as Nalo Hopkinson, China Miéville, and Ursula K. Le Guin, Lord does indeed belong in such select company—yet, like them, she boldly blazes her own trail.

Now Lord returns with a second novel that exceeds the promise of her first. The Best of All Possible Worlds is a stunning science fiction epic that is also a beautifully wrought, deeply moving love story.

A proud and reserved alien society finds its homeland destroyed in an unprovoked act of aggression, and the survivors have no choice but to reach out to the indigenous humanoids of their adopted world, to whom they are distantly related. They wish to preserve their cherished …

6 utgåvor

Scifi that makes use of telepathy tropes should concern itself with social technologies

I've never cared much for stories that incorporate telepathy. Usually it adds little except perhaps a novel way to depict the violation of a beautiful woman's consent (looking at you, Star Trek The Next Generation). But Karen Lord uses telepathy to explore intimacy and consent in a positive way, albeit set against the backdrop of a genocidal catastrophe. Our heroine, Grace, is a middle-aged civil servant who gets assigned to be a liaison between her government and a group of refugees who have come to make a new home on her planet after theirs was destroyed. Not only that, but because of the stricter gender roles in the refugees' society, the survivors skew male at a rate of about 80%. So they and Grace set off on a cross-planet adventure to visit various communities whose values and genetics are compatible with the survivors' in order to help them find wives …

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Jane Eyre IN SPACE? I dunno, but I'm not completely bowled over by it. The setup of a world being destroyed, and the few survivors doing everything to, as far as possible, preserve their culture and way of life while having to become refugees among strangers, is both timely (Lord was inspired by the 2004 tsunami, but hey, look at the world...) and effective, and the worldbuilding is very nicely done, with hints dropped bit by bit rather than in big infodumps, making the reader realise that you already know stuff when it shows up.

Unfortunately the love story itself (which reads as partly classic romance, partly repurposed Spock/Uhura fanfic, not that there's anything wrong with either) overwhelms the plot, which becomes far too episodic and oh-we're-over-here-now for my taste, dragging the story out rather than advancing it.

2.5/5.