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Terraplane: A Novel
  

Terraplane: A Novel (Hardcover)

de Jack Womack (Author) "A TOAST," SAID OUR HOST AND CONTACT, SKURATOV ..." En savoir plus
4.5étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (4 évaluations de client)

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From Publishers Weekly

A droll and disturbing novel about time-travel, Womack's second work (after Ambient ) presents a vision of the pastNew York circa 1939every bit as frightening as its vision of the future. The narrator-protagonist, Luther, is a spy for an American corporation doing business in 21st century Russia, a society that is a nightmare parody of a capitalist society in its final, self-destructing stagescorrupt, consumer-mad and violent. Luther and his pal, Jake, meet with two Russians who are also involved in industrial espionage, and who reveal a secret Soviet invention, a time machine that is the product of a clandestine ESP lab. Escaping from Moscow with their catch, Luther and Jake activate the time-travel device when cornered by the Soviets, and are hurled backward in time to Depression-era America. They land in New York City at the time of the great World's Fair of 1939, but it is a funhouse-mirror vision, with everything slightly askew. Events have deviated somewhat in this parallel world. Cuba is now a state of the Union, slavery wasn't abolished until the turn of the century; and FDR was assassinated before taking office, thus aborting the New Deal and throwing the country into an even more severe depression. The book follows these disoriented refugees in this slightly mad world, as they seek to recover the time machine so that they can return to the future. Womack ingeniously plays with history and science to create a cats-cradle of a narrative. The futurespeak language he has invented for his characters makes the beginnings of the book a little rough going, but once the characters land in the past, it quickly takes off into imaginative hyperspace.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal

A Terraplane was an American automobile, wasn't it? It's also an early clue to its passengers (or to us) that the 1939 they have entered from the 21st century differs from the one in history books. A Russian scientist who has defected to the past via a VCR is hotly pursued by the Soviets and by black American general Luther. Once the FBI joins the chase, the action starts popping like a string of firecrackers, but it takes a long fuse to get there. And some sparks don't ignite: e.g., Stalin as poster-boy for a consumer society ruled, like America, by a gigantic corporation. Womack has imagined some nifty solutions to the dilemmas of time travel, but his moral imagination wastes itself on sympathy for an assassin. Luther's narration, in a knotty, futuristic English, doesn't help. Hugh M. Crane, Cambridge P.L., Mass.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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4 évaluations
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4.5étoiles sur 5 (4 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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5.0étoiles sur 5 One of my very, very favourite books., Oct. 25 2001
Par Monde (San Francisco CA USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: Terraplane (Paperback)
I've fallen in deep intellectual love with this series, and this is my favourite of the lot (I've not yet bought Elvissey, but won't be long 'til I do.) It's the language style that makes this stuff so indescribably charming - and though the source gets all too little recognition, the Womack trademark "nouns-to-verbs" style of speech seems to actually be becoming a realworld phenomena here and there.

The story is - in a word - cinematic. This really should be a movie, hopefully with narration here and there to capture the lingo. I could see the people, places and changes of time's evanescent scenery through Luther's eyes and mind. Hollywood? Knock off the remakes and sequels and look to this man for a great movie book that's a great reading experience as well. Few cinematic stories touch me this way. This touched, shook, slapped, embraced and knocked me upside the head a few times in the process.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 A rewarding transtemporal love story, Janv. 31 2001
Par Mac Tonnies (Kansas City, MO USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Terraplane (Paperback)
"Terraplane," Womack's earlier novel, is a rewarding transtemporal love story that shares a great deal of its plot with "Elvissey": visitors from our future go back in time--not to 1950s Memphis, but to a deranged alternate 1930s where slavery was only recently abolished and the AIDS epidemic has been prefigured by an extraterrestrial virus that causes heightened dexterity, intelligence--and certain death. Womack's skewed look at our past is as frightening as any imagined future. "Terraplane" is a haunted examination of what it is to be human, laced with wit and sad romance. Definitely a trip worth taking.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Like Maus?, Déc 21 2000
Par Kevin S. Schemerholtz (Sunny Oakland, California) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: Terraplane (Paperback)
The complaints raised against this compelling and important work are meaningless. This novel is masterpiece, and the comments it makes about race history in America and slavery as part of our nation's serious underside are profound, important, and impossible for 99% of SF nerds to understand. Let them go back to the easy answers in Heinlein. For many people, "Maus" by Art Spiegleman brought home the horrors of the Holocaust. This novel did the same thing for slavery that Maus did for 1940's Poland.

Great SF is not writing about the future, it is a way to get us to start thinking about the present. For those with the courage to challenge themselves and their thinking, few books are going to go as far as this one. Like PKD and Orwell, Womack is a master who writes literature, not SF. Not sure of where genre ends and literature begins? Grow up and buy this book.

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Black Ship to Hell
The buzzsaw prose, the narrative dash, the pure killing purpose, everything that made Womack's promising debut *Ambient* a terrific read and yet somehow... Read more
Publié le Aoû 24 2000 par In One Ear Out Your Mother

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