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The Einstein Intersection - Community Reviews back

by Samuel R. Delany, Neil Gaiman
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Christine's Book Adventures
Christine's Book Adventures rated it 12 years ago
"Suddenly the wandering little beast fled, leaving in my lap-O horror-a monster and misshapen maggot with a human head."Where is your soul that I may ride it!"" Aloysius Bertrand/The Dwarf
sologdin
sologdin rated it 12 years ago
Almost surreal at times, this reworking of Orpheus and Theseus narratives is set on Earth after humans have moved along elsewhere (dead? gone? no idea) and some other wierdos have taken over. It has the normal far future/dying earth conventions: chatty old cryptic computers still running, mutants...
target acquired
target acquired rated it 13 years ago
Samuel R. Delany: scifi master, queer black boundary-crosser, critic and outsider, beloved cult figure, college professor, poet, genius.i had a hard time with this one at first, and gave up about a third of the way in. i didn't understand what was happening and i resented the novel - it confused and...
MatthewHunter
MatthewHunter rated it 13 years ago
What just happened? Is "The Einstein Intersection" the work of a genius or a drug-addled madman? By giving it the Nebula award in 1967, the powers that be appear to lump Delany in the genius category. I'm in the Delany-as-madman camp. I far from enjoyed the book for a number of reasons.Delany's pop ...
Maggie the Ranter
Maggie the Ranter rated it 13 years ago
A really lovely and thought-provoking blend of science fiction and mythology, and a great exploration of the concept of 'different'. I will read this one again, there is no doubt!
meganbaxter
meganbaxter rated it 13 years ago
I had never read any Samuel R. Delany before, so I wasn't sure what to expect. And I don't think I was expecting this lyrical, mythical, entrancing science fiction. Delany weaves together new and old myths into a science fiction story about a race living in the ruins humans left behind, trying on th...
Manny Rayner's book reviews
Manny Rayner's book reviews rated it 52 years ago
Psychedelic 60s SF version of the Orpheus and Eurydice myth, quite nicely done. The Orpheus character is sympathetic and well-realized, as is his demonic opponent, Kid Death. Eurydice is suitably beautiful, tragic and mysterious, but doesn't have much of a personality. Not a serious problem, however...
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