3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The Saga of Ignatz and Primavera, April 9, 2004
I was anxious to read this as soon as I bought it but then learned it was part of a trilogy (Dead Boys, Dead Things). Now that I have all three I am reading them. I have to say I was a little disappointed by this first book.
The time is the future. Europe had become the center of luxury goods before the economy collapsed. One of the luxury items were the dolls. Gynoids. Artificial women. But somewhere along the way something happened and a plague struck that could be transmitted between doll and human. The plague created more dolls. Now London is sealed off to try and contain the plague.
Primavera is mostly a doll. Ignatz is in love with her and addicted to her. They have escaped from London (no easy task) and are looking to put their lives together and cure her.
The story follows their quest, jumping between past and present in a manner where you are not always sure where you are. These sudden scene changes added to the new vocabulary and the workings of the future world will make this confusing for many readers.
In the story we find out how they got together, how they escaped, what and who is behind the doll plague, and to what depths some might sink when all is falling apart.
It wasn't a bad book, but it wasn't polished either. It reads like something that slipped into the wrong pile in the editor's office. It really could use a little reformatting (not rewriting) to make the story better.
I hope the other two are better set up.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Meh, October 25, 2008
While there may be an interesting story buried beneath the frenetic prose and flip-flopping between past and present, I wasn't willing to find it. I did however, like the concept.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Vampiric Barbie Dolls, October 4, 2005
Cute little English Girls transform into Vampiric Barbie Dolls in a world consuming itself with rabid economic competition, disintegrating nation-states and a complete breakdown in "family values". The masochistic Ignatz travels surreal circles to protect his nano-tech "Doll" from shadowy Yakuzas both corporate and governmental. However, it is the world that needs protecting from the singularity that swirls within her plastic womb.
Is this love at first bite or just nothing ever turns out right? Both are true in this psychedelic, sci-fi parable cautioning against so many things that it is clear this world will end, not with a nanotech bang but a post-coital whimper.
The writing is a tour de force and the author's fervid imagination is matched by his powers of description that, while intentionally confusing, are never confused. Propulsive. Vivid. Sexy. Disturbed.
Don't fall in love.
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