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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Clever premise, September 18, 2001
This review is from: Angry Young Spaceman (Paperback)
Jim Munroe's science often falls apart (how did a liquid-covered planet ever develop metallurgy) but his science fiction, which is little more than using a set of narrative tropes to explore the human condition, is top notch. Sam Breen is a twentysomething 'pug' who gets into meaningless, angry fights because he knows that medical technology can fix him up simply. When he decides to go teach English on another planet though, he learns the dark side of modernity; simply learning another native language would be enough to hand the intellectual property of an entire planet over to wealthy earthlings. AYS is a "marvelous journey" story, a tour of our world dressed up like another. Munroe explores punk, intellectual property rights, the "exoticism" of the Third World and the discontents of the modern world in a clever, often funny and sometimes very tragic book.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Angry Young Author (4.5 stars), August 9, 2002
This review is from: Angry Young Spaceman (Paperback)
ANGRY YOUNG SPACEMAN is a fast, fun, touching, tragic book about a disenfranchised young man who departs a future Earth -- treeless, oceanless, completely commercialized and culturally regulated -- to teach English on a backwater, underwater world. On the surface, this book is an interesting, vividly imagined fish-out-of-water story, but it is also so much more. Munroe packs this book chock-full of biting social/cultural/political commentary/criticism -- pretty much you can just substitute America for Earth, and just about any third-world country for Octavia, and you'll get the picture. Despite the serious and relevant undertones, the book is written in a funny, witty, straightforward conversational tone, making it very readable and almost impossible to put down. The characters, while not people I'd particularly want to spend time with, are interesting and likeable, the settings are interesting, well fleshed-out, and believable. The customs and conventions of the people ring true, as do the attempts by the locals of "modernization" to meet the Earth standards. This book is well worth the read.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Compelling mix of classic sci-fi and contemporary anger, January 12, 2002
This review is from: Angry Young Spaceman (Paperback)
Munroe continues the keen-eyed, witty social analysis of FLYBOY ACTION FIGURE COMES WITH GASMASK and increases his range of targets, from the media conquest of spontaneous, grass-roots "subcultures" such as punk (in the book's case, "pug," a loosely structured system of street fighting that brings Chuck Palahniuk to mind)--a process that seems not to have changed a great deal by 2959, only becoming more formalized--to the larger phenomenon of cultural imperialism, here substituting "Earth" for "America." Sam Breen, a twentysomething similar in many ways to FLYBOY's Ryan Slint, heads for the underwater world of Octavia to teach English and faces many of the perils and irritants of being a member of the galaxy's ruling entity while in a colonized region. While learning the language and getting to know the locals, he falls for Jinya, a young female who seems as interested in Earth as he is in Octavia. Mixed in with the narrative are compelling observations of life on Earth and Sam's former "pug" subculture that have urgent and relevant parallels for the present day. ANGRY YOUNG SPACEMAN certainly merits 5 stars, even though I still prefer FLYBOY (although that could certainly change after repeat readings). Through intriguing plot twists and tender portrayals of romantic longing, Munroe manages to transcend genre and create a well-crafted scifi novel that certainly shouldn't keep away those who "don't get" scifi.
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