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Bezig met laden... Goud roem citrus roman (2015)door Claire Vaye Watkins
Books Read in 2016 (1,410) Books Read in 2015 (1,433) » 13 meer Books Set in California (116) Female Protagonist (777) SFFKit 2016 (2) Best Survival Stories (104) Climate Change (23) Disasters in Fiction (12) 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. The first sentence had me. I love these sort of terrifying ultra plausible, inevitable eco-dystopias. Really, a collapse of the delicate systems of human beings wouldn't take much. And when will we know when we're actually IN IT? The scenario in Claire Vaye Watkin's imaginative book is drought causing sandvalanches at the site of the Amargosa Super Dune, swallowing America 500,000 years before it should, particularly in the already-almost-gone deserts of the American West. Luz is an ex-model squatting in the rich mansions of the "laurelless canyon" with her boyfriend. Because of Luz's status as a Mojav, a new sort of refugee from the waterless places, disregarded and condemned by those living in the "better" parts of America, Luz, her boyfriend and a stolen child find themselves in the Super Dune. Though now as I'm typing, I'm questioning if Luz is a Mojav, because I feel there wasn't enough of her back story. Either Luz is too vapid for this book, the desert slows everything down OR possibly some of these topics are tough for Claire Vaye Watkins to write about... I'm not sure if it was a combination of selfish main characters and the result of some of their choices, or the writer's own closeness to things like her family's familiarity with a cult or operating a writing workshop for teens called the Mojave School -- but something seemed to keep the general text at a remove from the reader, while I loved the level of detail in other parts of the novel. One example: the story is told in different ways, like a Super Dune bestiary including drawings. Though there is no set time that I could find (which is a smart thing to do for any eco-fiction), a fantastic description of future nightmarish TV shows probably set the time (yet since the publication of this book in 2015, TV is probably much closer to TV shows available now.) It's the little details that make Claire Vaye Watkins a writer I'm looking forward to reading more from. Set this on the shelf next to: The New Wilderness - Diane Cook California - Edan Lepucki A Friend of the Earth & Drop City & The Tortilla Curtain - T.C. Boyle Trouble No Man - Brian Hart Severance - Ling Ma Annihilation - Jeff VanderMeer (if America was being taken over by a desert instead of what happens in 'Annihilation') When a Novel Fails ... Let the title be a warning to literary fiction fans who like their writers to make a dollop of sense and to dystopian novel fans who cherish sharp conflict and galvanic plotting: if the title makes little sense, don’t expect the avalanche of words following to clarify things. Doubtless, Watkins can write evocative descriptions. Unfortunately, in her novel, these become the centerpiece of the entire literary venture. The plot boils down to no more than wandering aimlessly in a desert, an unwanted gift of from humankind’s reckless disregard of natural resources. Her characters, the wanders, mull much over, but instead of intriguing you and stimulating your own thoughts, they commit a cardinal sin of literature, for which, you will feel them justly condemned to the desert: they bore you to distraction. And this is a shame, for there lurks within these pages a potentially interesting novel. Less time getting out of L.A., less time baking under the sun, less time waxing on and on about what things look and feel like, more time expanding upon the chaos caused by the drought, perhaps expansion of the mining section and a rant on authoritarianism, a more coherent crystallization of the mad prophet of the desert, and the addition of more consciousness to the desert, an anthropomorphism often hinted at but never realized, perhaps these might have made this a better novel, or at least a more enjoyable one. When a Novel Fails ... Let the title be a warning to literary fiction fans who like their writers to make a dollop of sense and to dystopian novel fans who cherish sharp conflict and galvanic plotting: if the title makes little sense, don’t expect the avalanche of words following to clarify things. Doubtless, Watkins can write evocative descriptions. Unfortunately, in her novel, these become the centerpiece of the entire literary venture. The plot boils down to no more than wandering aimlessly in a desert, an unwanted gift of from humankind’s reckless disregard of natural resources. Her characters, the wanders, mull much over, but instead of intriguing you and stimulating your own thoughts, they commit a cardinal sin of literature, for which, you will feel them justly condemned to the desert: they bore you to distraction. And this is a shame, for there lurks within these pages a potentially interesting novel. Less time getting out of L.A., less time baking under the sun, less time waxing on and on about what things look and feel like, more time expanding upon the chaos caused by the drought, perhaps expansion of the mining section and a rant on authoritarianism, a more coherent crystallization of the mad prophet of the desert, and the addition of more consciousness to the desert, an anthropomorphism often hinted at but never realized, perhaps these might have made this a better novel, or at least a more enjoyable one. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
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©2015. - Vertaling van: Golf fame citrus. - New York : Riverhead Books, 2015.
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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Luz and Ray are two such displaced persons. Living in a mansion abandoned by a starlet, they decide to take her vintage Karmann Ghia and head for Seattle and safety. On the way, they steal a child, Ig, from a group of drifters.
Coming to grief in the dune sea, Luz is found by a group of survivalists living on the edge. Their leader, Levi, has big dreams in which Luz and Ig both play a part.
This is a pretty good book, albeit with a few confusing loose ends and, frankly, terrible sex scenes. It reminded me somewhat of The Road, Lord of the Flies, and even Dune at times. Watkins is a talent to watch. ( )