My all-time favorite sci-fi book! I'd like to see a movie; CGI dolphins!Rereading STARTIDE RISING. I seem to be off on a Brin kick.
Have to say, though, that I was very disappointed with the sequel novels ("Brightness Reef", etc.).
Moderator: I'm Murrin
My all-time favorite sci-fi book! I'd like to see a movie; CGI dolphins!Rereading STARTIDE RISING. I seem to be off on a Brin kick.
The person responsible for the blurb wrote:Viriconium: the Pastel City was the last bastion of the civilised world, where Queen Methvet Nian ruled supreme.
In Viriconium, the young men whistle to one another all night long as they go about their deadly games. If you wake suddenly, you might hear footsteps running, or an urgent sigh. After a minute or two, the whistles move away in the direction of the Tinmarket or the Margarethestrasse. The next day, some lordling is discovered in the gutter with his throat cut. Who can tell fantasy from reality, magic from illusion, hero from villain, man from monster...in Viriconium?
You just mentioned 2 of the 3 best works in the history of the genre IMHO.This afternoon, I started Viriconium by M. John Harrison. It was one of those instances of being in a second hand book shop, and picking up a random book I've never heard of, by an author I don't recoginise, simply because it's there and sounds interesting. The fact that it's part of the Fantasy Masterworks series helped. So far...dark and very strange. In some ways, it reminds me of Gormenghast.
My mind boggles that someone has heard of him. Neither the author's name nor any of the titles you mention mean anything to me at all. Before reading many books, I have at least heard of the author or the title - but M. John Harrison and Viriconium are completely new to me.Ainulindale wrote:M. John Harrison, besudes being hard for me to believe somone hasn't heard of him- is a simply a god ... Far from a one-trick pony, he has a couple of other superior novels out, Course of Light, and Signs of Life - and a terrific collection, Things that Never Happen.