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Loading... City of Golden Shadow (Otherland, Volume 1) (original 1996; edition 1998)by Tad Williams
Work InformationCity of Golden Shadow by Tad Williams (Author) (1996)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I had such high hopes for this book. I adored Tad Williams' WAR OF THE FLOWERS, and I really wanted to like this. Unfortunately, while Tad has some interesting ideas and explores a world that has the potential to be highly interesting, the book itself is dull, dull, dull. Uneven pacing and entire chapters that go nowhere made it difficult for me to plod through 800 pages just to get to an end that... well, isn't. Sorry, Tad, but I won't be continuing with this series. Life's too short to waste on horribly tedious books, no matter how good the writing. (C ) I originally came across the book cover on the 'net; I follow a Mastodon account that just posts old scifi novel cover art and the image of this city was so entrancing I confidently added it to my "to read" list. That weekend, while at a wedding, I was browsing the shelves in the common room of my hostel and came across it in paperback. Reading it in the mornings before festivities began, I was both compelled and disturbed. Themes of conspiratorial violence and child endangerment ultimately put me off, even as the setting intrigued. A year later, however, I found myself looking for a setting from which to crib my own for a prospective cyberpunk tabletop roleplaying campaign, and returned to see if I couldn't borrow some network components to repurpose for my friends. Thoroughly diverting, "City of Golden Shadow" seems to be a direct ancestor of both "Ready Player One" and "Sword Art Online", but it's a mature work for adult readers and it takes itself much more seriously in both themes, depth of pathos, and writing. Published in 1996, many of the books references to "the 'net" are awkwardly, if endearingly, off-the-mark, which is to say that they carried forward some assumptions about computing that haven't held up, such as the ubiquity of on-premise servers (whereas what we got was "the cloud"). It also fails to predict "graceful degradation," eg nowadays we never encounter white noise because our network errors are filtered through many comfortable abstraction layers. Ultimately, the imagery is vivid, and the author is enjoying himself. As he put it in an interview, the various virtual worlds of the 'net are an excuse to write micro fictions in a trillion genres. He certainly exhibits a tireless imagination. Also, it turns out that the author and I share a hometown—the location of the wedding and the hostel—so it's not such a huge coincidence that I came across the book, only that I happened to be looking for its cover in the first place. That being said, it shares that privilege with a dozen other book covers I've spotted just this way on the 'net. There's probably no sentience and/or conspiracy inhabiting the internet and luring me toward the golden city to save the world. That's probably not happening IRL. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesOtherland (1) Belongs to Publisher SeriesDAW Book Collectors (1045) Heyne Allgemeine Reihe (53075) Is contained inContainsAwards
Fiction.
Science Fiction.
Thriller.
HTML:ANYONE CAN GO THERE... COMING BACK IS ANOTHER STORY. The first in a four-audiobook series, Otherland: City of Golden Shadow is a complex suspense novel of the near future, where virtual reality has expanded to encompass all aspects of society — and national, physical, and mental boundaries are limited only by the virtue or darkness of the imagination, offering an entirely new level of freedom to people in all walks of life. But a blood-chilling conspiracy involving the world's most powerful individuals now threatens to shatter this world to its very core.... No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Overall, I did enjoy this. Not sure if I'll continue reading the series right away, but I wouldn't mind revisiting in the future when I have knocked out a few other books I'm looking forward to. ( )