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Bezig met laden... The People: No Different Flesh (1966)door Zenna Henderson
Bezig met laden...
Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. Not a brilliant review: The People, from another planet that was destroyed, look human but have powers we earthlings don't have and are much better than we are. One woman, unlike all the others we learn about, is haughty and selfish and self-centered---and grieving and pregnant---until she realizes how wrong her behavior is; she seems unrealistic to me. All the others have evolved; there are hints of a difficult past and science-related abilities that had to be relearned in order for them to travel in space. (Unless that was in the first book. This is the second book of the series, composed of short stories (based on the list of copyright dates.)) Some humans have done terrible things to them, reminiscent of pogroms and other massacres. The action seems to take place in the American Southwest. The People are very religious, and connect to our Bible (which I assume was not available on their planet). They can sense when they are about to die and are very accepting of death; it's unusual to find a science fiction book with faith such an important part of the characters. Presented in a similar framing story as the first book of the People, 'Pilgrimage', this book present another set of tales about the small group of aliens lost on Earth after the destruction of their old Home. This time, a couple who had lost their own child find a young girl who has problems keeping her feet on the ground - all-too-literally! Knowing they can't keep the girl, they launch a search for her parents who would be surely looking for such a precious child by who knows what means. Not that they were expecting the parent to be the survivor of a hit and run accident caused by the local wild boys. With father and daughter re-united with the earth bound groups of the People, their rescuers are traeted to a collection of tales about the lives of the People as they made Earth a new Home. Although most of these stories also end on a positive note, they are grimmer than the first set of tales overall. I reviewed this linked collection of stories on SF Mistressworks: https://sfmistressworks.wordpress.com/2014/12/04/the-people-no-different-flesh-z... geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Onderdeel van de reeks(en)The People (Collection 7-12)
A group of aliens who look like humans infiltrate Earth's society. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)813Literature English (North America) American fictionLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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Although some of the description is vivid, I find it unconvincing in places because some of the stories are actually the recollections of humans who encounter individuals of the People, not the People (who have race memory recall) themselves, and I find it hard to picture how they can have word by word recall of what human beings felt, especially as those narratives start before they encounter one of the People.
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Re-read
My review above stands. I would only add that in one of the later stories, the woman of the People narrating the story is an absolute brat, possibly the author's reaction to the general perception that the People are all absolute paragons of virtue in the majority of stories in this and its predecessor, 'Pilgrimage'. And even so, I didn't really buy the Jemmy character, met in several tales before, stranding a heavily pregnant woman in a flood.
The other point I would make is to add a trigger warning regarding infant mortality because that is a major plot point in two of the stories. As before, my rating is an OK 2 stars. ( )