3/ Between the title of the book and the epistolary format, by page 5 anyone can guess exactly what happens: the two "enemies" fall in love and elope away from the forever-war. Except. None of that happens for ~100 pages. For endless pages, it's just letters, back and forth
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4/ The flirting only went on for 100 pages, but it was so painful to read that I felt like I was locked into a never ending war across infinite timeliness. Also, because this is the cUrReNt yEaR, OBVIOUSLY the two rivals-turned-lovers are both women.
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5/ Because, are you really even an artist, bro, unless you make the point over and over and over that women are good and natural and the default sex, and lesbian is wholesome and wonderful and pure?pic.twitter.com/udCylmOSqQ
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6/ So that's the first 100 pages: just cringy post-human lesbian flirting, between two overly self-involved characters who are both oh-so-proud of how witty they are, how in love with words and books they are. So. Much. Cringe.
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7/ Then the final 1/3 of the novel is the resolution. The inevitable moment where they decide that they need to escape the forever war and be lovers. And ... yawn. I literally guessed the entire plot in the first 5 pages.
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8/ On the bright side, the sentences are wonderful, the imagery is amazing, and you're dazzled over and over and over again by sites, smells, entire worlds that are touched on for just one sentence and then moved past.
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9/ I'd forgive the "this isn't REAL SF ; this isn't what a novel is supposed to be!!!" issue in other contexts. This is far from the first time someone has tried an experiment way outside the bounds of normal SF novels. I've read Michael Moorcock. I bear scars of the New Wave
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10/ ...but bc we're in the middle of a communist entryist insurgence that has pretty much 100% successfully taken over the science fiction field, killed it, skinned it, and is now wearing the rotting hide as it dances, ghoul-like, across the landscape, speaking power to truth
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11/ ...I am far less indulgent and tolerant of such "experiments" than I might have been 20 years ago. This reads like 2 parts "look what I can do / this is fresh / this is new / this is also art" (which I respect) and, in the current year, 5 parts ...
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12/ "GTFO Niven and Heinlein and Asimov and Hal Clement ; this is OUR space now. And all you nerds who are here for the dead white males? You GTFO out too". So, anyway, that's my review: * masterful writing * no plot * SJW infiltration Exeunt.
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13/ Am I saying "don't read it"? No. I am not. There's great writing there, and it's worth paying attention to. There are good reasons to buy and read this book...for some. I am saying "if you want an SF novel where anything happens...yeah, then probably don't buy it".
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ⓘ Dogs don't have thumbs Retweeted ./agstover.exe
ⓘ Dogs don't have thumbs added,
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