Tales of Neveryon (Neveryon)

Pas de couverture

Samuel R. Delany: Tales of Neveryon (Neveryon) (Paperback, 1979, Bantam Books)

Livre broché

Langue : English

Publié 26 novembre 1979 par Bantam Books.

ISBN :
978-0-553-12333-3
ISBN copié !
Numéro OCLC :
5464386

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Aucune note (2 critiques)

2 éditions

a publié une critique de Tales of Neveryon (Neveryon) par Samuel R. Delany

If Conan the Barbarian was written by Margaret Mead and Michel Foucault

Aucune note

An anthology of interwoven short stories that take place in a fictional ancient civilization - heavily implied to be the first ancient civilization, actually. Two pairs characters feature in all of them, until they finally meet in the last one; Norema, the barbarian woman and her companion Raven, a warrior from a matriarchal society who is constantly accosted by culture shock in this strange country where men do get to make decisions, and Gorgik and Little Sarg, the lovers, who use their old slave collar as a ruse to free other slaves, as well as a powerful symbol within their sexual relationship. (Look, Delany is a man of interesting sexual tastes and little shame, so you're going to find out about them.)

While that makes this book sound pretty lurid (which is why I decided to read it, not gonna lie), it's actually much more concerned with portraying the contrast …

a publié une critique de Tales of Neveryon (Neveryon) par Samuel R. Delany

If Conan the Barbarian was written by Margaret Mead and Michel Foucault

Aucune note

An anthology of interwoven short stories that take place in a fictional ancient civilization - heavily implied to be the first ancient civilization, actually. Two pairs characters feature in all of them, until they finally meet in the last one; Norema, the barbarian woman and her companion Raven, a warrior from a matriarchal society who is constantly accosted by culture shock in this strange country where men do get to make decisions, and Gorgik and Little Sarg, the lovers, who use their old slave collar as a ruse to free other slaves, as well as a powerful symbol within their sexual relationship. (Look, Delany is a man of interesting sexual tastes and little shame, so you're going to find out about them.)

While that makes this book sound pretty lurid (which is why I decided to read it, not gonna lie), it's actually much more concerned with portraying the contrast …