Natasha Pulley
Auteur de The Watchmaker of Filigree Street
A propos de l'auteur
Séries
Œuvres de Natasha Pulley
Oeuvres associées
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Date de naissance
- 1988-12-04
- Sexe
- female
- Nationalité
- UK
- Lieux de résidence
- Cambridgeshire, England, UK
- Études
- Oxford University
University of East Anglia (MA|Creative Writing) - Prix et distinctions
- Betty Trask Award in 2016
- Agent
- Jenny Savill
- Courte biographie
- Natasha has lived in Japan as a Daiwa Scholar, as well as China and Peru. She was a 2016 Glastone Writer in Residence, and she teaches on Bath Spa University’s Creative Writing BA, alongside short courses at the Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education.
Membres
Discussions
Group read: The watchmaker of Filigree Street à The Green Dragon (Février 2016)
Critiques
Listes
Five star books (2)
First Novels (1)
Europe (1)
2016 reads (1)
2010s (1)
Prix et récompenses
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 6
- Aussi par
- 2
- Membres
- 3,721
- Popularité
- #6,807
- Évaluation
- 3.8
- Critiques
- 192
- ISBN
- 87
- Langues
- 6
- Favoris
- 9
I've started this review several times and found myself caught up in complex and lengthy summary, so I'm going to forgo the summary almost completely. I'll just say, imagine January, an Earth refugee, a former dancer with the Royal Ballet, who moves to Tharsis, a Mars colony, and experiences all kinds of physical and cultural shocks. (Most of the other reviews of this title include such summary, so you'll have no trouble finding some.)
I'd like to highlight the points of contact and tension that drive this novel.
• Miscommunication between a gender-neutral Tharsis culture and a highly gendered Earth approach to identity
• Huge differences in physical strength between recent Earth arrivals (strong, having lived at a gravity three times that on Mars) and Tharsises (fragile bones and reduced strength as a result of generations of life on lower-gravity Mars)
• Lots and lots of difficulties concerning the costs and benefits of assimilation
• A possibility of physical assimilation, "naturalization," that risks the health and lives of the Earth refugees
• Complicated and bloody political manoeuvering among Tharsis politicians
• An uneasy arrangement between a Tharsis politician determined to make naturalization mandatory, and January, who is looking for a way of moving beyond the poverty and exclusion he's experienced on Tharsis
• And the possibility of an awkward, near-impossible budding romance.
So that's
√ The climate crisis on earth
√ Climate refugees on Mars
√ State-sponsored disabling of arriving refugees
√ Colonial tensions as Earth nations attempt to maintain control over Tharsis
√ Awkward non-binary/binary attraction
Pulley is gathering up the foibles of our own time and holding up a mirror to our biases and incompleteness via a space colony 200 years in the future. As always, the prose is exquisite, the plotting full of twists, and the central characters emotionally engaging. Bonus: woolly mammoths (yep, those, too).
I received a free electronic review copy of this title from the publisher via Edelweiss; the opinions are my own.… (plus d'informations)