Merge
A Novel from Crosstown to Oblivion
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- 55,00 kr
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- 55,00 kr
Publisher Description
Walter Mosley's talent knows no bounds. Love Machine is one of six fragments in the Crosstown to Oblivion short novels in which Mosley entertainingly explores life's cosmic questions. From life's meaning to the nature of good and evil, these tales take us on speculative journeys beyond the reality we have come to know. In each tale someone in our world today is given insight into these long pondered mysteries. But how would the world really receive the answers?
Raleigh Redman loved Nicci Charbon until she left him heartbroken. Then he hit the lotto for twenty-four million dollars, quit his minimum wage job and set his sights on one goal: reading the entire collection of lectures in the Popular Educator Library, the only thing his father left behind after he died. As Raleigh is trudging through the eighth volume, he notices something in his apartment that at first seems ordinary but quickly reveals itself to be from a world very different from our own. This entity shows Raleigh joy beyond the comforts of twenty-four million dollars...and merges our world with those that live beyond.
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PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Heavy-handed and often ponderous, Mosley's second volume of paired Crosstown to Oblivion novellas (after The Gift of Fire/On the Head of a Pin) doesn't hold a candle to his subtle and nuanced crime fiction. In "Merge," the Earth is invaded by beings that first manifest as dead branches; when one appears in the living room of Raleigh Redman in 2007, he begins a relationship with it. The creature, whom Redman unimaginatively dubs Wood, reveals that beings from its planet need to merge with non-human Earth life to survive. The leaden prose ("I was the dregs at the bottom of a coffee cup trying to imagine what it was like to be cream") adds little to a familiar trope. "Disciple" starts more promisingly, with its narrator trapped in a dreadful data-entry job before he is positioned to become "a hero to the peoples of infinity" by saving civilization. These tales are, alas, dull rather than thought provoking.