Correspondence
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- $2.99
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- $2.99
Publisher Description
"Correspondence is a short but complex and confident first novel, warmly human ... and cheerfully subversive" - Interzone
"I believe this novel will be enjoyed by cyborgs and humans alike" - Amazon Reviewer, 5 stars
In this complex novel the reader takes the role of the narrator, and works as a compositor, a new kind of storyteller.
Once a wife and mother, you now long to escape from the world of human emotion into the calm and pain-free life of a cyborg, and you design a different kind of future for yourself. You become an extension of the prosthetics attached to you and create characters from your source materials. But you must be careful, your characters, Shirley and Rosa, may have agendas of their own, leading to unexpected consequences...
A hypnotic mix of cyberpunk and magical realism, this chilling first novel by Sue Thomas marks the debut of a corrosively brilliant writer. Subversive and utterly imaginative, Correspondence breaks the boundaries of conventional fiction to explore the meaning of consciousness itself.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Thomas's short but ambitious first novel dispenses with traditional narrative structure to tell two related stories, juxtaposing science fiction and a mainstream tale of women dealing with the crises of middle age. Told in the second person, the science fiction story serves as a frame. In it, a bereaved woman works as a ``compositor'' of virtual reality fantasies while she slowly replaces all her body parts with cybernetic prostheses. Meanwhile, Shirley and Rosa--who appear to be characters in the compositor's current project--encounter pains similar to those of the compositor and eventually drift into a lesbian affair. Thomas splices in passages from the writings of Marvin Minsky and Douglas Hofstadter as well as ``infodumps'' discussing the interface between humans and machines (``Machine Religion,'' ``Machine as Friend''). Individually, the strands of the plot work well--in one particularly good scene, the compositor confronts two door-to-door evangelists with her transformed body, asking what place a cyborg has in God's plan. Little synergy develops between the story lines, nor does Thomas explore many of the issues she raises. Nevertheless, her limpid prose illumines many poignant moments, and her brave experiments with form and subject ultimately reward the reader.