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Midnight Robber
 
 

Midnight Robber (School & Library Binding)

de Nalo Hopkinson (Author) "Oho. Like it starting, oui? Don't be frightened, sweetness; is for the best ..." En savoir plus
3.8étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (13 évaluations de client)

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From Amazon.com

Nalo Hopkinson's first novel, Brown Girl in the Ring, was selected from almost 1,000 entries to win Warner Aspect's First Novel Contest, and after publication it received the Locus Award for Best First Novel and was a finalist for the Philip K. Dick Award. So expectations have been pretty high for her second book, and Midnight Robber lives up to them; it's a beautifully written, innovative, demanding, and wonderful novel.

On the Caribbean-colonized planet of Toussaint, Carnival is a Lollapalooza of music and dance, a Mardi Gras, a masquerade; and the Robin Hood of Toussaint legend, the Robber Queen, is just another costume, Tan-Tan's favorite. Then Tan-Tan's corrupt politician father commits a crime that sends them into exile on the extradimensional planet New Half-Way Tree, Toussaint's untamed quantum twin. As she struggles to survive the violent criminals, mysterious aliens, and merciless jungles of New Half-Way Tree, Tan-Tan finds herself taking on--or being taken over by--the mythic persona and powers of the Robber Queen. --Cynthia Ward --Ce texte provient de la Paperback édition.



From Publishers Weekly

The sounds and rhythms of the Caribbean and Carnival suffuse Hopkinson's second novel (after Brown Girl in the Ring). On the Carib-colonized planet of Toussaint, Antonio Habib, the scheming, philandering mayor of Cockpit County, murders his wife's lover in a rigged duel and must then flee his high-tech planet, taking with him only his young daughter, Tan-Tan. The pair end up on New Half-Way Tree, Toussaint's alternate-universe twin, a primitive and dangerous world inhabited primarily by Toussaint's exiled criminal class and the douen, an alien race reminiscent of creatures from Caribbean folklore. There, Antonio's life lacks purpose, and although he remarries, he gradually degenerates into an angry, sexually predatory drunk. Growing to adulthood, Tan-Tan is deeply scarred by her father's assaults on her. Eventually she kills him in self-defense and, pregnant with his child, flees into the forbidding bush that surrounds their small settlement. Tan-Tan is kept on the run by Antonio's jealous widow, seeking vengeance for her husband's death. Hiding among the trees, Tan-Tan learns the secrets of the douen and gradually transforms into another figure out of Caribbean folklore, the Midnight Robber, who dresses in black, spouts poetry, steals from the rich and gives to the poor. Hopkinson's rich and complex Carib English can be hard to follow at times, but it is nonetheless quite beautiful; her young protagonist, at once violent and vulnerable, is extremely well drawn. Both Toussaint, a world almost awash in nanotechnology, and the more primitive New Half-Way Tree are believable, lushly detailed worlds. Like its predecessor, this novel bears evidence that Hopkinson owns one of the more important and original voices in SF. Agent, Don Maas. (Feb.) FYI: Brown Girl in the Ring won a Locus Award for Best First SF Novel.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient de la Paperback édition.

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Tan-Tan the Robber Queen, Mai 15 2003
Par "blissengine" (Norfolk, VA USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: Midnight Robber (Paperback)
On the Caribbean-colonized planet Toussaint, Tan-Tan is the daughter of a city mayor whose jealousy gets the better of him. Committing a terrible crime, he flees to Toussaint's dark sister New Half-Way Tree, and takes Tan-Tan with him. Tan-Tan and her father settle among the other criminals and aliens in a small settlement run by a bisexual warlord. When her father crosses the line too far in his abuse of her, Tan-Tan embraces the spirit and lore of the Robber Queen and fights back. Fleeing for her life, she lives among the aliens they call the douens, where she slowly heals and tries to find herself. As her past stalks her present, Tan-Tan is forced to choose whether to fully embrace the lore of the Robber Queen if she's to have a future of any sort. Taking the rhythms and patois of Caribbean literature and setting them in the realm of science fiction, Nalo Hopkinson has created an intriguing tale of a young woman healing her scars and finding inner strength. While this is not a new story, the details and storyweavings are, and those are the strong points of "Midnight Robber". The circular storytelling was distracting for me, as were some of the meanderings into Tan-Tan's daily struggles to survive. What kept me going was not only the science fiction world Hopkinson created for this story, but also the idea that storytelling would set Tan-Tan free.
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3.0étoiles sur 5 Nalo Hopkinson Surely has Stolen a Torturers Tongue!, Juil 12 2002
This review is from: Midnight Robber (Paperback)
With a voice and a world-building style startlingly different from the usual SF or Fantasy author, Ms. Hopkinson transports readers into an altogether different sort of future. The story is of Tan-Tan, a young girl growing up on the Caribbean-colonized planet called Touissant. There she lives in relative wealth and comfort, until her father flees the authorities, and the two become exiles in the strange, and unforgiving world of New Half-Way Tree. It is in this realm of strange creatures, and hard-bitten men and women that Tan-Tan must come of age, and discover her own story. The struggle is a long and arduous one, and persevering against all the odds will cost Tan-Tan a great deal more than she imagines. It is this struggle and her growth into adulthood that allow her to take possession of the Robber Queen myth for herself.

There is so much here that is impressive. Ms. Hopkinson's skill with world building is a treat. So much of the standard fantasy and SF scenarios and metaphors are cleared from the field, and a wealth of mythology, story telling and culture from the African and Caribbean worlds are set in place. The result is a departure from what this genre usually has to offer, a deft weaving of myth and technology a grittier and oft-times harsher world-view. The narrator's poetic voice and author's skilled use of language serve to cement the landscape and confirm that the reader has departed from the tried and true paths, into the wilds of another culture, another realm, where anything might happen. The Caribbean flavor of the language is spicy and powerful-strong and primal. These are storyteller words, delicious to read aloud and savor. And Ms. Hopkinson is able to paint her story with this language without making the read ponderous or awkward. Ms. Hopkinson provides a much needed voice in the realm of women's and multicultural fiction. There is not enough representation of African or Caribbean voices or main characters in today's SF and Fantasy, and this author's efforts are helping to help fill the gap. She's a strong writer, with a lot of potential and a hungry audience waiting for her to fulfill that potential.

Beyond the praise, however, I didn't feel that MIDNIGHT ROBBER was quite the story it could have been, despite all that is wonderful about it. Ms. Hopkinson sets up readers for an exotic and flavorful feast-but does not pace the meal well. The story seems to be forever waiting to start. So much goes on, and there are magical breaks of story telling from the narrator, but these stories and the life of Tan-Tan don't really meet up until the last bit of the book. The narrator refers to telling an anansi story, but I felt the spider's web somehow got disconnected-and didn't quite make the tapestry they were aiming for.

At the opening of this tale, Ms. Hopkinson introduces Tan-Tan's father, Antonio as a complex and interesting character involved in political intrigues and a troubling love life. Yet, these first scenes and actions seemed to have relatively little to do with the story that develops. Antonio fails to remain interesting, instead becoming a vehicle by which Tan-Tan is swept into the world of New Half Way Tree. The world of Toussaint, as compared to New Half Way Tree, where two thirds of the book takes place, was actually the more vivid and fascinating world. New Half Way tree seemed simplistic by comparison. Simplistic and brutal. Characters tended to be less developed than their environment. Ms. Hopkinson's debut novel, BROWN GIRL IN THE RING was more complete in regard to story and pacing. The villains were obvious, the goals were comprehensible and the outcome satisfying. In MIDNIGHT ROBBER these lines are not as clearly drawn-and didn't allow for a comfortable conclusion. The story begs for a sequel, for the rest of Tan-Tan's magical and legendary heritage to be revealed.

Similar to her debut novel, Ms. Hopkinson has created a story is strongly feminist in tone. It's refreshing to see strong women characters that face the world on their own terms and it's beneficial for young readers to have another type of heroine to identify with. However, I must contend that Ms. Hopkinson's male characters in this story are almost entirely vilified and/or emasculated. There is no male protagonist in this book that commands respect or admiration. Nearly all the men are full of villainy and corrupt thoughts and motives. I think it a disservice to Tan-Tan's character that there is not any male characters that come close to being a match for her-either as allies or adversaries. It would allow for a more powerful story. A word of warning to readers, this is not a light or sweet book. It deals with dark and violent imagery and actions. Rape, murder and treachery are all part and parcel of this story. It is not a "fairy tale" in the way so many readers are exposed to them today, but it has a lot in common with the older, darker fairy tales that are their origins. At its heart it is a story of survival and overcoming obstacles; it is a story about human perseverance and the power that resides in one's self.

Personally, I think it would be worthwhile to see a story set solely in the world of Toussaint-there are so many elements of the lifestyle and technology that exists that Ms. Hopkinson only touches on in passing, and I would enjoy seeing them explored further. I can only hope Ms. Hopkinson's writing will improve and that she will continue writing, I feel she has a lot to offer her readers and look forward to her future endeavors.

Happy Reading! -shanshad ^_^

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4.0étoiles sur 5 afrofuturism, Mai 25 2002
Par zakia (Brooklyn, NY) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: Midnight Robber (Paperback)
Hopkinson spins an imaginative tale about a young woman named Tan-Tan who lives on a Caribbean colonized planet named Toussaint. Tan-Tan`s world is embellished so completely with technology that manual labor is practically unheard of and each citizen of Toussaint is connected to a central computer system that operates somewhat like a matriarch Orwellian Big Brother network. To escape persecution, Tan-Tan and her father travel to New Half-Way Tree, a co-existing dimension where technology is null and the creatures of mythology and bed time cautionary tales are real. In this rugged world, Tan-Tan matures into a self assured and powerful young woman despite the mistrust many of the people of New Half-Way Tree feel for her and her father, difficulties negotiating unfamiliar territories and cultures, and unwanted sexual advances.

Hopkinson story telling had developed beautifully. Her strength and talent as a writer shine in Midnight Robber. As in Brown Girl, Hopkinson writes once again in a Patois peppered Caribbean dialect that reads effortlessly and sounds like music if you try to read it aloud. The characters she creates are thick and full-blooded. Tan-Tan is a shero in she own right and the planet, people and creatures of Toussaint and New Half-Way Tree will keep your fingers turning page after page after page.

As a kid, I read a lot of science fiction and fantasy: Madeleine L`Engle`s, C.S. Lewis, Ursula K. Leguin, Ray Bradbury, Piers Anthony, Issac Asimov and Choose Your Own Adventure novels. However, up until a few years ago, I did not know of any people of color writing science fiction. But my list has grown. There is of course Octavia E. Butler. Other sci-fi writers include Jewel Gomez, Samuel Delaney, Tananarive Due, Phyllis Alesia Perry and Steven Barnes. Too, the recent anthology, Dark Matter edited by Sheree Thomas offers a wide array of Black speculative fiction writers whose work spans decades. So if you thought Star Trek`s Luitenent Uhuru and Mr. Sulu were about it as far as colored folks in space and beyond, rest assured you`re dead wrong.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

1.0étoiles sur 5 Snoozer
I didn't like Brown Girl in the Ring so I'm not sure why I bothered with Midnight Robber, other than that it was nominated for a Hugo. I regret it. It's a real snoozer. Read more
Publié le Avril 25 2002 par Escott Fleming

4.0étoiles sur 5 spicy like jerk
I thought i'd come to an end after reading all of Octavia E. Butler's books, ending my enjoyment of cultural inspired sci-fi. Read more
Publié le Avril 2 2002 par 99% sure

4.0étoiles sur 5 A Fine Novel By A Promising Young Science Fiction Talent
If Walter Moseley is correct in saying that science fiction is the last, best hope for Afro-American literature, then surely he must include the work of the young Canadian writer... Read more
Publié le Mars 25 2002 par John Kwok

4.0étoiles sur 5 Always on the search for new talent
This is the first piece of Nalo Hopkinson's work that I have read and I have to say that I am impressed. I must qualiify that, however. Read more
Publié le Fév 26 2002 par sweeneyjca

3.0étoiles sur 5 Good, but not Hugo material
I'll start by agreeing with everyone else that the lilt of the Caribbean dialect alone makes this book worth reading. Read more
Publié le Juil 23 2001 par Rachel Grey

4.0étoiles sur 5 Enjoyable and Different SF novel
_Midnight Robber_, nominated for both the Hugo and Nebula awards, is a pretty darn good book. It's told in a Caribbean-flavoured English "patwa", which quickly reads... Read more
Publié le Mai 18 2001 par Richard R. Horton

5.0étoiles sur 5 Superb second novel
Occasionally one is privileged to stumble across a new writer who has it all: plot, style, wit and emotion. Nalo Hopkinson's Brown Girl in the Ring was a startling debut. Read more
Publié le Jui 29 2000 par Farah

5.0étoiles sur 5 Wonderful book, wonderful language
I've just finished this book, and I enjoyed it tremendously, even the heartbreaking parts. Even the parts that pose major moral questions for which nobody has any answers. Read more
Publié le Mars 19 2000 par Suzette Haden Elgin

5.0étoiles sur 5 A beautiful voice in fantasy
On the planet Toussaint, womanizing Cockpit county Mayor Antonio catches his wife sleeping with Quashee. Read more
Publié le Mars 19 2000 par Harriet Klausner

5.0étoiles sur 5 This was a great read
Patois speaking frilled lizard creatures, succulent fruits, deadly plants, a problematic father and a main character with fire in her soul. Read more
Publié le Mars 14 2000 par A Constant Reader

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