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Friday, June 20, 2008
Sea of Poppies: A Novel by Amitav Ghosh
Amitav Ghosh's Sea of Poppies, the first volume in his "Ibis trilogy", revisits in new, breathtakingly detailed and compelling ways some of the concerns of his earlier novels. Among these are the incessant movements of the peoples, commerce, and empires which have traversed the Indian Ocean since antiquity; and the lives of men and women with little power, whose stories, framed against the grand narratives of history, invite other ways of thinking about the past, culture and identity.

The action begins in March 1838 with the arrival of the Ibis at Ganga-Sagar Island and, later, Calcutta. Discontinued as a "blackbirder" with the abolition of the slave trade, the schooner is scheduled to transport girmitiyas – indentured coolies – to Mauritius. For the merchant-nabob, Benjamin Burnham (the rhetoric has changed little today), "when God closes one door he opens another".



The novel closes with the Ibis in mid-ocean in a storm. Serang Ali, leader of the lascars, has abandoned ship, along with the convicts and the condemned; the first mate as well as the subedar are dead; of the key figures only Deeti, Paulette, Nob Kissin and Zachary are left, watching from the deck the disappearance of the long boat and those close to them. We also watch, awaiting with eagerness the second volume of the trilogy.

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posted by Raisa @ 9:23 PM   0 comments
Friday, June 6, 2008
Her Smoke Rose up Forever


Her Smoke Rose up Forever - James Tiptree Jr

Her Smoke Rose up Forever is an anthology of eighteen science fiction stories compiled from the published collections of James Tiptree, Jr. (the pseudonym of Alice Sheldon). It includes such classics as "The Women Men don't See" and "Houston, Houston, do you Read?". Even after several months to reflect, I would rank it as the single most impressive volume of science fiction stories by one author I have read.

The mood of Tiptree's stories is almost uniformly dark, with themes centering on death and sex, and reading them is at the same time emotionally draining and exhilarating. A few of the stories (such as "We Who Stole the Dream" or "And I Have Come Upon this Place by Lost Ways") are a little contrived, but their failings are only obvious next to their companions, some of which are perfectly cut gems, almost too brilliant to be readable. Tiptree is inventive and has some original ideas, but it is the sheer power of her writing and its emotional engagement which is most impressive: I don't think I will ever be able to forget stories like "Your Faces, O My Sisters! Your Faces Filled of Light!", "The Screwfly Solution" and "Love is the Plan; the Plan is Death". Her Smoke Rose up Forever is not a volume to be tackled lightly, but it is definitely worth making an effort for.

Source:http://dannyreviews.com/h/Her_Smoke_Rose_Up.html

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posted by Raisa @ 12:07 AM   0 comments
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