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Title: | Arcana Caelestia |
Notice: | Directory listings are in topic 2 |
Moderator: | NETRIX::thomas |
|
Created: | Thu Dec 08 1983 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1300 |
Total number of notes: | 18728 |
956.0. "Alan Dean Foster: CYBER Way" by SUBWAY::MAXSON (Repeal Gravity) Sat Feb 16 1991 16:40
"CYBER Way" - Alan Dean Foster, ACE, ISBN 0-441-13245-6, $4.50
(C) May, 1990
Vernon Moody is a backcountry-bred cop serving on Tampa Homicide,
and is assigned to investigate the mysterious murder of a millionnaire
art collector and his maid. What makes this murder interesting is
that both were killed by lightning, and of his art collection, nothing
was stolen, but one piece, a Navaho Sandpainting, was deliberately
destroyed. In this high-tech world of the indeterminate future, the
Navahos have replaced the Japanese as economic giants, and Vernon
must go to the desert-Mecca of the Rez (reservation), learn the history
of Navaho religeous "medicine" paintings, and find the murderer.
Strange, but it seems there's a computer virus woven into the
sandpainting, and the murderer may not be human...
-----
Opinion: ADFoster has always been an excellent story-teller, and his
skill at weaving a plot and developing characters has not failed him.
On the other hand, Foster has always seemed overly "commercial" in some
sense - his stories read like screenplays (often, they ARE
screenplays), and any underlying message seems less than profound.
In CYBER Way, the story seems like a thin cloak disguising a rather
long, but interesting, lecture on the legends of the Navaho/Hopi
people. The reader cannot avoid the distinct feeling that he has
accidentally strayed into an Anthropology classroom at University of
New Mexico. My own guess is that Foster has been doing some independent
study of his own lately and just wanted to share all of this neat
stuff; but since he only writes SF stories, this was the only mechanism
at his disposal to present his essay. Asimov does this more gracefully
by simply writing non-fiction. Still, there's enough here to make an
entertaining read - but it's deliberately educational, a la Clavell's
Shogun, Michener's Space, and other similar travelogues. Definitely
PBS material. I'll give it a generous five, since the mythology is
intriguing.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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956.1 | Glory Lane also by ADF | TOOK::OCONNOR | Dodge Vegga-matic there in the parking lot | Wed Jul 15 1992 14:51 | 13 |
| Another ADF book: Glory Lane
First off I should establish that I like ADF.
I won't write as formal review as .0 but I have to say that the plot is
good. The story takes a little bit of time to get going but when it
takes off, as do the characters :-), things really fly. The
observations throughout the book are a riot. The story does have that
element of tying some science in with the fiction which I do like.
I'm not into ratings but I will say that it was a page turner.
Joe
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956.2 | | PEEVAX::GIFFORD | Wild eyed loon at the gates of oblivion. | Wed Jul 15 1992 21:41 | 36 |
| Glory Lane....
I enjoyed this book. In some respects it what a little whimsical, but still
enjoyable..
<Spoiler>
I particuly liked the part when the alien explained that the Aliens scientists
had discovered that fat and grease was good for you....
As a person who frequently battles with his weight, I can go with this one!
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