On Such A Full Sea
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2.0 • 1 Rating
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
On Such a Full Sea takes Chang-rae Lee's elegance of prose, his masterly storytelling, and his long-standing interests in identity, culture, work, and love, and lifts them to a new plane. Stepping from the realistic and historical territories of his previous work, Lee brings us into a world created from scratch. Against a vividly imagined future America, Lee tells a stunning, surprising, and riveting story that will change the way readers think about the world they live in.
In a future, long-declining America, society is strictly stratified by class. Long-abandoned urban neighbourhoods have been repurposed as highwalled, self-contained labour colonies. And the members of the labour class-descendants of those brought over en masse many years earlier from environmentally ruined provincial China-find purpose and identity in their work to provide pristine produce and fish to the small, elite, satellite charter villages that ring the labour settlement.
In this world lives Fan, a female fish-tank diver, who leaves her home in the B-Mor settlement (once known as Baltimore), when the man she loves mysteriously disappears. Fan's journey to find him takes her out of the safety of B-Mor, through the anarchic Open Counties, where crime is rampant with scant governmental oversight, and to a faraway charter village, in a quest that will soon become legend to those she left behind.
Customer Reviews
Bland and unbelievable
This book came to me highly recommended so I was disappointed to find, when I started to read it, how bad it was. For Dystopian fiction the writer needs to create a believable world. Sure interesting characters an plot wouldn't go astray but if the reader is left bewildered at every stage about the lack of plausibility in the fictional setting, it is hard for the other element of the narrative to redeem the novel. The future world is poorly visualised and lazily depicted using many aspects of current society rather than imagining whst might change in the future. The fantasy elements are not plausible and are ideologically rather than realistically imagined. Likewise the moral and philosophical messages are vague and weakly conveyed as none of the characters seem to suffer from the ills they constantly complain of. Also the book seemed to be in need of editing as the grammar lapsed frequently.