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Tea From a Empty Cup
 
 

Tea From a Empty Cup (Mass Market Paperback)

de Pat Cadigan (Author) "Now, why would anyone become a prostitute?" the white guy asked, sipping his iced coffee through a long, skinny straw ..." En savoir plus
3.0étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (25 évaluations de client)
Price: CDN$ 8.99 & se qualifie pour Livraison super-économique GRATUITE pour des commandes de plus de CDN$ 39. Détails
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Habituellement expédié sous 3 à 5 semaines.
Vendu et expédié par Amazon.ca.

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Two-time Arthur C. Clarke Award winner for Best Novel, Pat Cadigan is the Queen of Cyberpunk for the brilliance of her ideas, the genius of her near-future extrapolations, and the beauty of her writing. No one else has explored and illuminated the mind-machine interface with the keen and relentless intelligence she demonstrates in her novels Mindplayers, Synners, Fools, and the long-awaited Tea from an Empty Cup. Her fourth novel is a perceptive, fascinating, witty SF mystery of artificial reality, whose paradoxical name perfectly defines its nature: an immaterial world of pure sensation, where, by legal mandate, everything is permitted and nothing is forbidden.

The hazards of Artificial Reality are spilling into the real world--people vanish and solitary gamers are found slain in sealed AR booths. The young woman Yuki, child of a Japan destroyed before her birth, enters AR as the new assistant to the mysterious celebrity Joy Flower, but with her own agenda: to find Tom Iguchi, her missing beloved, who never was her lover but had been one of Joy's Boyz. The hard-boiled homicide detective Dore Konstantin stalks the virtual streets of post-Apocalyptic Noo Yawk Sitty seeking a serial killer who may have murdered eight gamers from inside AR itself. But how do you find missing or hidden persons in a world where nothing is as it seems? The two plot lines subtly converge as fact and fantasy, murderer and victim, as well as understanding and identity invert in a virtual universe where the dangers are real and ever-present, and you can be anything or anyone but yourself. --Cynthia Ward --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.



From Publishers Weekly

Artificial reality is where it's at if you're hot to party in the 21st century. Plugged-in gamers flock to such AR sites as post-Apocalyptic Noo Yawk Sitty for wild cyberspace adventures. It costs a bundle to visit but it's guaranteed safe; you can die in AR and be back partying the next day. But now gamers are turning up dead in the real world, impossibly dead in locked rooms, in ways that mimic their supposedly harmless deaths on the Net. Dore Konstantin, a homicide cop with little AR experience, realizes that to solve the murders she's going to have to enter cyberspace. There she searches for the mysterious entity known as Body Sativa and, in an act of deliberate provocation, does so wearing the AR appearance of Shantih Love, the latest murder victim. Yuki Harame is also searching for someone, her missing lover who may or may not be the dead Shantih Love. Although neither Konstantin nor Yuki know of each other's existence, both have entered a dark world of online sexual perversion, and both are in deadly danger. In her first novel in five years, two-time Arthur C. Clarke Award winner Cadigan (Synners; Foods) tells a gritty and downbeat tale of multiple murders, exchanged identities and cybernetic sadomasochism. Konstantin, the embittered cop, and Yuki, the rootless nisei, are effective protagonists, but, as is often the case in Cadigan's work, the author's pyrotechnic style and intensely detailed descriptions of cyberspace are the major attractions. This well-done example of cyberpunk noir detective fiction should especially appeal to fans of William Gibson.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

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Now, why would anyone become a prostitute?" the white guy asked, sipping his iced coffee through a long, skinny straw. Lire la première page
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L'avis des consommateurs

25 évaluations
5 étoiles:
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4 étoiles:
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3.0étoiles sur 5 (25 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Zen Meets Cyberpunk, Jui 28 2004
Par Joshua Koppel (Chicago, IL United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
If you can wrap your mind around Zen concepts you might want to check out TEA FROM AN EMPTY CUP by Pat Cadigan, a short, but good, novel that takes a slightly Zen approach to the idea of virtual reality.

Virtual reality is here and it is cheap enough so that much of the population works just to live their lives in some of the virtual scenarios. One young man is found dead in a locked room where he was logged in. His throat was cut and there are no sharp objects in the room. A detective notices that a number of other similar deaths have occurred recently. Thus two quests are taken up as two women log in disguised as the young man and try to find out what he was doing and who he may have met. It is a strange world where things are more real than real. Sensations are heightened and rumors exist of a way out the other side. It is this world that the two women must navigate to find out what happened.

The switching viewpoints are a little more confusing that is usual but the future world is quite interesting. I like the melding of cyberpunk, virtual reality and Japanese philosophy. It blends well and offers a good backdrop for that rare commodity, the science-fiction mystery. I picked up the book to look at it and found myself hooked right away. A very entertaining read if you don't mind having your mind bent and limbered up a bit. Check it out.

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1.0étoiles sur 5 Fool me once. . ., Sep 12 2003
Par Un client
I bought this book based on a slew of hushed and awed reviews, and now issue fair warning. This is a shallow, pretentious, dull and silly book, which doesn't so much end as stagger to a halt. Word is that the 'story' picks up in a following book but, fool me once . . . Like Delmar, shackled in the flickering blue unreality of a picture show, I warn, "Do not seek the treasure." Unlike Delmar I know it is because there is no treasure to be found.
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1.0étoiles sur 5 Utter Tripe, Mai 19 2003
Par R. Diamond - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Cyberspace is addictive, expensive and ultimately boring. Thanks for the newsflash.

With numerous typographical errors, undifferentiated cardboard characters, a murderously tedious whodunit and the most uninteresting rendition of cyberpunk in a decade, Cadigan has achieved a new low in modern science fiction.

Would have been more appropriately titled, Words from an Empty Book (and even that sounds more interesting than this book ends up being).

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Commentaires client les plus récents

4.0étoiles sur 5 Good fun book for cyberpunk fans
This the first book of Pat Cadigan's I've read. I can't remember who or where I heard about it, but a good book. Read more
Publié le Avril 19 2003 par Michael Pusateri

4.0étoiles sur 5 Hey. . . I liked it.
I have to start off by saying that the cyberpunk genre is not my cup of tea (pun intended); however, due to a course I am taking in college, I have read a few books from this... Read more
Publié le Déc 2 2002 par Kate Helmkamp

4.0étoiles sur 5 Reality vs. Artificial Reality
"If it's reality, how can it possibly be artificial?" One of Pat Cadigan's characters asks this question in her novel Tea from an Empty Cup. Read more
Publié le Déc 1 2002 par Lindsay Gray

4.0étoiles sur 5 Back and Forth...
Tea from an Empty Cup is a cyberpunk novel with somewhat of a twist. A murder mystery entwines the lives of a smart homicide detective named Konstantin and a Japanese woman named... Read more
Publié le Nov. 21 2002 par Ashley Goetze

2.0étoiles sur 5 Cyberspace for Dummies?
...Most of "Tea" chronicles the investigations of two people, The World's Most Clueless Detective (tm) and The World's Most Gullible Semi-Girlfriend (tm). Read more
Publié le Nov. 11 2002 par Keith

5.0étoiles sur 5 Deserves(/Demands) a Second Read!
I bought this book two years ago. Put it down. Came back to it and started re-reading from the beginning... This book is pure cyberpunk, and awesome! Read more
Publié le Sep 27 2002 par Joshua A. Bevan

2.0étoiles sur 5 No ending.
This book starts out well, and there's some resolution to the main premise of the novel (how and why the deaths happen). Read more
Publié le Avril 15 2002

4.0étoiles sur 5 An Intriguing Cyberpunk Murdery Mystery Novel
Pat Cadigan is one of the founders of cyberpunk, and makes a long awaited return to writing cyberpunk novels in this first installment of an ongoing series revolving around... Read more
Publié le Déc 21 2001 par John Kwok

3.0étoiles sur 5 Ok, a little thin
I like Cyberpunk, and books like Snow Crash. If I could have a hundred variations of Snow Crash, I'd buy them all. This book tried, but really didn't make it. Read more
Publié le Sep 3 2001 par Eric J. White

1.0étoiles sur 5 A Bad Dream
I really hated this book. Usually when I dislike a book this much I just stop reading it, but I continued to expect that what I was reading was the set-up and that then the book... Read more
Publié le Aoû 8 2001 par C. A. Irvine

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