The sloth talk in Natter reminded me to mention Lauren Beukes' Zoo City here - it's a pretty amazing read (& Arthur C. Clarke winner).
'Objects In Space'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
it's a pretty amazing read
Isn't it? I thought the ending was a bit too fast, and hard to follow, but the world-building, concepts, and characterization was so good. I will be reading more by her.
I wanted to like it more than I did, but it was good.
I want to know more about the Ontological Shift. What does the animaling mean? What are the parameters of that? But she never really got into it.
BTW, there were a couple of Zoo City stories in Yuletide this year, one of them talking about the Ontological Shift. It was pretty cool, although too short.
I want to know more about the Ontological Shift. What does the animaling mean? What are the parameters of that? But she never really got into it.
I know!! I was really hoping for more worldbuilding since the idea was so interesting.
I want to know more about the Ontological Shift. What does the animaling mean? What are the parameters of that? But she never really got into it
yes. This.
I hope we'll see more from her on the subject.
Wait- do they become animals or have to carry around the animal?
The latter.
There's a sense in one particular scene - at the hospital, with her brother, that it's not the act, it's the guilt that triggers it . That could actually be a very deft handling of a shift. Er, as long as I'm reading the author's intent correctly and not the just rejiggerings of one of her readers.
Marks got "The Fighting Uruk-Hai" chapter up, and he immediately focused on the description of the Orks as "Mongol-type." He went into this speech about the horrible racism and how he's just going to have to forgive Tolkien for basing his evil race on Asians. For a change, most of the comments seem to be challenging his interpretation instead of just agreeing with it. I suspect a different pool of commenters than those who are following Mark Watches.