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14+ oeuvres 118 utilisateurs 2 critiques

Œuvres de Leigh Kennedy

Saint Hiroshima (1987) 16 exemplaires
Faces (1986) 8 exemplaires
Her Furry Face 6 exemplaires
Wind Angels (2011) 5 exemplaires
One Horse Town 3 exemplaires
The Silent Cradle 2 exemplaires
Belling Martha 1 exemplaire
Salamander [short story] (1977) 1 exemplaire
We Shelter [short story] (2008) 1 exemplaire
Whale Song 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

The Year's Best Science Fiction: Nineteenth Annual Collection (2002) — Contributeur — 522 exemplaires
The Year's Best Science Fiction: First Annual Collection (1984) — Contributeur — 131 exemplaires
Isaac Asimov's Space of Her Own (1983) — Contributeur — 103 exemplaires
Custer's Last Jump and Other Collaborations (2003) — Auteur — 77 exemplaires
The Best of Isaac Asimovs SF Magazine (1988) — Contributeur — 71 exemplaires
The Apes of Wrath (2013) — Contributeur — 66 exemplaires
Shadows 6 (1983) — Contributeur — 54 exemplaires
The Year's Best Fantasy Stories: 10 (1984) — Contributeur — 50 exemplaires
Afterlives (1986) — Contributeur — 47 exemplaires
Isaac Asimov's Fantasy! (1985) — Contributeur — 37 exemplaires
Universe 12 (1982) — Contributeur — 32 exemplaires
Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact: Vol. XCVII, No. 6 (June 1977) (1977) — Contributeur — 32 exemplaires
Myth-understandings (1996) — Contributeur — 30 exemplaires
Best of Shadows (1988) — Contributeur — 28 exemplaires
New Myth and Magic (1993) — Contributeur — 15 exemplaires
Clarkesworld: Issue 096 (September 2014) (2014) — Contributeur — 13 exemplaires
Die Pilotin. Internationale Science-Fiction-Erzählungen (1994) — Contributeur — 6 exemplaires
THE WORLD AND THE STARS: Dazzling Science Fiction and Fantasy (2015) — Contributeur — 3 exemplaires
Die Sterne sind weiblich (1993) — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires
Das Blei der Zeit (1993) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

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Very strange society in which all are long lived and must take different careers over the years - the viewpoint character is still famous for his circus...employment retirement old age
 
Signalé
AlanPoulter | Jun 12, 2016 |

Some novels spend a very long time on my shelves before suddenly the moment is exactly right for me to read them: they're novels I know are going to offer me a marvelous experience, and I don't want to run the risk of missing out on a single scintilla of that experience through launching myself upon the voyage when the tides aren't quite right, or something. Choose your own cliche: you know what I mean. So for years the books sit there, and on occasion I gaze at them with a loving eye -- sometimes I even pull them down off the shelf and fondle them before putting them back again -- until finally, one day . . .

I bought Saint Hiroshima in the late 1980s, quite probably (shamefaced confession) as a remainder; I see that Leigh kindly signed it to me in '97, but the book was a longstanding possession by then. The other day, soon after I'd finished reading Brian Hall's The Saskiad and was wondering what next to read, I caught sight of the green spine and the old Bloomsbury logo out of the corner of my eye and, bang!, the book was in my hand. After waiting two decades, I read it in a day.

That last sentence tells you quite a lot about how good a book Saint Hiroshima is. It gains its title from an opening sequence, a childhood experience of small-town Katie Doheney: the same day that she's the close-up witness of a horrific traffic accident she hears (yes, hears, because the installer's having difficulty getting the picture to stabilize) a tv programme about the Hiroshima bombing, and the two events become conflated in her mind. Thereafter she has a phobia about The Bomb; the woman who died in the traffic accident, and whose smashed-up body came crashing down right in front of Katie's aghast eyes, becomes a personal archetype, Saint Hiroshima.

The other main protagonist is Phil Benson, a phenomenally talented musician. The two of them are pulled together as if by a force of nature during their adolescence and become teen sweethearts; for the rest of the book they succeed, through happenstance, through lack of self-faith and/or ambition, through folly and through a sort of reverse serendipity, in drifting inexorably further and further apart -- this even when a horrifically cruel trick played on them crams them together for a couple of weeks in a cramped bomb shelter, believing the nuclear holocaust has come. For a long time, though not lovers, they remain each the most important person in the other's life, but by the novel's close I was reminded of that merciless Leonard Cohen throwaway line at the end of his account of a doomed love affair: "I remember you well in the Chelsea Hotel. That's all. I don't even think of you that often." Katie and Phil have become, as it were, "oh, just someone I used to know".

The book has a lot more plot than I'm indicating above; but really it's a novel that's almost less concerned with plot than it is about tale-telling -- and the tale-telling is an absolute joy. Saint Hiroshima was well worth the wait.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
JohnGrant1 | Aug 11, 2013 |

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Œuvres
14
Aussi par
23
Membres
118
Popularité
#167,490
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
2
ISBN
16
Langues
1

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