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Stamping Butterflies
 
 

Stamping Butterflies (Paperback)

de Jon Courtenay Grimwood (Author)
3.5étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 évaluations de client)
Prix éditeur: CDN$ 16.00
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From Publishers Weekly

Grimwood stumbles in this ambitious SF stand-alone, which falls short of the high mark set by his Arabesk trilogy (Pashazade, etc.), hard-boiled mysteries set in a near-future where the Ottoman Empire still exists. Grimwood alternates between the present-day efforts of an assassin to kill the U.S. president and a more cryptic future story line set aboard a Chinese spaceship. While the two plots eventually converge in a way most time-travel fans will have anticipated, the whole proves to be less than the sum of its parts. The action can become confusing and the language overblown. As usual, though, the author displays much cunning and wit as he grapples seriously with political themes. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Grimwood's Arabesk trilogy (Pashazade, 2001; Effendi, 2002; Felaheen, 2003) blended William Gibson-esque cyberpunk, alternate history, and hard-boiled detective elements. His new novel straddles the line between political intrigue and futuristic sf. It's the story of a lone gunman whose failure to assassinate the U.S. president opens a Pandora's box of mysteries. The novel explores the would-be assassin's life by leaping backward and forward in time, from his upbringing on the streets of Marrakech to more than 4,000 years hence, when he wields great tendrils of influence on a system of worlds ruled by a Chinese emperor. Prisoner Zero (so dubbed because he chooses to remain mute after arrest) is either a madman or an undiscovered genius whose cell-wall scribblings may contain the formula to humanity's first warp drive. Grimwood skillfully weaves Moroccan and Far Eastern culture in an inventive, philosophically resonant story line that keeps the reader guessing about Prisoner Zero until the final pages. Carl Hays
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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2 évaluations
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3.5étoiles sur 5 (2 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Fabulously refreshing, Avril 11 2008
Par C. Koenig "Astronoid" (Vancouver, CA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Ce commentaire est de: Stamping Butterflies (Hardcover)
Probably not for everyone, but I enjoyed this book immensely. A well-amalgamated mixture of science fiction, cyber punk, and regular fiction, all three story lines kept me spellbound all the way to the unconventional but exceptionally well-crafted ending. (Don't you hate reading an interesting book and the author just messes it up in the last 10 pages?).
The most novel novel I have read in a long time ;-)

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2.0étoiles sur 5 Be careful with this one, Sep 14 2006
Par Loki Xombi "Nox" (Alberta, ED Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
I don't know...maybe I just missed the whole point of the book or something. The book was remarkable well written, including fantastic imagery and very seamless style; it was rather poetic and lovely to read. HOWEVER, the plot is so ridiculously outlandish and hard to decipher, that it actually made reading the book a chore.
Stamping Butterflies takes place in 3 different time periods: the past circa 1977, the present, and the FAR distant future. In the past we meet Moz, a small boy living in squalor in the streets of Marrakesh. You watch this young boy become a young man, fall in love with his only friend Malika, and learn how to deal with the abusive and manipulative police force of his home town. It even deals with how this young man gets hooked up with an English Pop star and his manager, to become their drug running toady. In the present time frame we meet a man who attempts to assassinate the US President, fails and then gets taken away to a remote Italian Island to be held for questioning and to wait until his death sentence. This part deals mainly with the abuse and neglect he suffers (willingly) while being detained. This was a very disturbing and enthralling experience to read about, and is written very realistically. Suddenly, this almost catatonic assassin starts writing super-sophisticated physics equations in his own filth, and becomes an international miracle overnight. Odd no? Then we move on to the future where a single being known as the Librarian has resurrected the lone survivor of a dying spaceship from Earth. This Librarian is actually a massive, solar system sized incomplete sphere, also called the 2023 worlds. This survivor who calls himself Zaq is a seriously complicated and depressed emperor over the 2023 worlds, and his emotions can actually govern the weather over the entire expanse of the sphere. There are also apparently hundreds of billions of other people who live inside the sphere, some you meet as old clerics, others are only voices, and some are talking tigers...but none of them are real to the Emperor Zaq. One of these beings is a young assassin women named Tris, who's on a mission to kill the Emperor, but you never really find out why until the end of the novel, so I wont spoil it.
ANYWAY, this book had so much promise to be interesting and suspenseful that it was scary. I mean, it just had so much cool stuff, but in the end, it's complicated flipping around through time and space, half answering questions and leaving ends floating free. I was interested enough to finish, but not overly impressed.
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