Spaceling, 1978 [This] is my personal favorite [Piserchia novel]. There are invisible
rings floating through the air, and people who can see them--a recent
mutation--can step through them to other worlds in other dimensions. (If
the world is too far from Earth-normal, they are transformed into
creatures adapted to that world.) Despite the possibilities of these
worlds, things are fairly grim on Earth--social breakdown, resource
depletion, a mysterious rise in the incidence of earthquakes--though
most of the problems remain in the background.
In the foreground, we have Daryl, whose abilities--exceptional control
of the rings and exceptional physical adaptations--extend well beyond
those of the standard mutation. She also has amnesia. In the course of one
of her unauthorized vacations from the school where she is being kept, she
is kidnapped and sold to a team of agents whose investigation turns out to
be related to the earthquakes. The problem of the earthquakes begins to
converge with that of her lost past--and neither seems to make much
sense. As I said, I had fun with this book. It's unrealistic, even on its
own terms--the enemies Daryl faces are Keystone-Kop-level inept--but
the character of the protagonist and the style of the narration make the
book enjoyable. --Dani Zweig, from Belated Reviews back to reviews index
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Spaceling, 1978
[This] is my personal favorite [Piserchia novel]. There are invisible rings floating through the air, and people who can see them--a recent mutation--can step through them to other worlds in other dimensions. (If the world is too far from Earth-normal, they are transformed into creatures adapted to that world.) Despite the possibilities of these worlds, things are fairly grim on Earth--social breakdown, resource depletion, a mysterious rise in the incidence of earthquakes--though most of the problems remain in the background.
In the foreground, we have Daryl, whose abilities--exceptional control of the rings and exceptional physical adaptations--extend well beyond those of the standard mutation. She also has amnesia. In the course of one of her unauthorized vacations from the school where she is being kept, she is kidnapped and sold to a team of agents whose investigation turns out to be related to the earthquakes. The problem of the earthquakes begins to converge with that of her lost past--and neither seems to make much sense. As I said, I had fun with this book. It's unrealistic, even on its own terms--the enemies Daryl faces are Keystone-Kop-level inept--but the character of the protagonist and the style of the narration make the book enjoyable.
--Dani Zweig, from Belated Reviews
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- tom moody 3-10-2002 7:31 am