Books : We Who Are About To...
|
|
In association with Amazon.com
|
by: Joanna Russ
List Price: $14.95Amazon.com's Price: $11.96 You Save: $2.99 (20%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780819567598
ISBN: 0819567590
Label: Wesleyan
Manufacturer: Wesleyan
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 144
Publication Date: March 15, 2005
Publisher: Wesleyan
Sales Rank: 478178
Studio: Wesleyan
Related Items:
Editorial Review:
Product Description: One woman's quest to die with dignity may doom them all.
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - One of the best SF novels I have ever read.
John W. Campbell's formula for great science fiction was, famously, "ask the next question." That's exactly what this bracing, challenging, bleak, funny, deeply subversive novel does, elegantly undercutting decades of unexamined science-fiction adventure cliches.
Recommended for anyone who ever wanted to lay into Compulsory Optimism with a meat ax. "The human race is fine. We're just not there."
Rating: - the highly capable, depressed woman
This is an old book, in print more than 30 years, but as it has minimal topical references it has not become as dated as some SF of the 70s. It is a gray, gloomy, depressing story that remains a downer right through the last sentence--there's no last-minute discovery of a meaning to life to redeem the book.
The first-person narrator is a highly capable, intelligent woman with loads of forethought and a sardonic attitude. If she mustered any of these qualities in support of anything ... Read More
Rating: - Dead boring.
This a story of a woman being bored to death. Really, she dies of it. There are some other characters to begin with, but they're a bit boring and she kills them half way through the book. Then we're left with this murderer, and her morbid fascination with, well, death, and her slow, well, death. There's that D word again. The book's actually more interesting then it sounds, but it's still dead boring. The writing is pretty good, but really, the plot is a killer. There's nothing going on, and the ... Read More
Rating: - wonderfully subversive
If I had read this book when I was fifteen, I do believe my life would have been entirely different. This is wonderfully subversive stuff, addressing all the problems any science fiction fan has with the "starship separated from civilization" plot, with a protagonist you will love to be appalled by.
Rating: - For those who believe in survival of none
I was young when I first read "We who are about to..." Too young, really, to grasp the full concept of life and death, the two main currents that lie within the book.
A cruise vessel of the future manages to miss the point in space that it was attempting to fold to, spinning amazingly far off course and crashing into a planet that is in no way guaranteed not to kill the survivors. A politician, an upper class family, a "jock", a young sex object, a washed up waitress, a supposed ... Read More
|
|
|