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EVE


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Future as Disney Dystopia, December 26, 2007
By 
Ian Vance (pagosa springs CO.) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: EVE (Hardcover)
Paradise is an old hoary dream for mankind. To frolic the Elysium fields, toast the mead-hall of immortality; to float within the angelic abode of fluffy white clouds with no pain, no drain, no struggle to attain even a smidgen of relaxation admist the toil and crushing uncertainty of the "real" - religions grow strong to the inarticulate conception; wars are waged to preserve that promise of afterlife exclusivity. In Greek, Utopia can be deciphered as "a place that does not exist", with good reason. To eliminate the various nastiness and chaotic impulses that make paradise intangible, to clense homo sapians of the tribal programming that make us kill, control, crucify and - the rare reward - conceptulize... would mean to fashion something *not* human. Already the building blocks are being reassembled, the genetic code reformed like a child's tinker-toy set. What will be the result of the intrinsic alteration of what we are, were, and might be, in the seductive goal toward that old hoary dream?

Aurelio O'Brien gives us a window to gaze through with his first novel EVE, a short, sly sci-fi nail-bomb of wit and wry acknowledgement - no matter the external change, some things will probably remain the same. The mind develops through experience, through pain and suffering and the lessons wrought; what happens when that experience is curtailed, the pain nullified, the suffering censored even from media-relics of the Age of Death? What happens when mankind is given all it could possible wish for, when breeding is outlawed and our core motivational receptors are dulled by the biomass file, when society is infantilized from the higher-ups to the regular joe, when everything is secure and in its proper place, when the margin for error is reduced to mechanized corrections? Will nature itself - abhorring vacuums, demanding change despite our best efforts to sterilize - will nature plant the alien seed in the clone catastrophe of the same?

EVE juggles these questions, and it is a credit to the author that they seep into the reader's contemplation as a feather-tickle of suggestion rather than a pedantic hammer of prose-blows and preaching. If struggle is what shapes character, as the Buddha among many others hypothesized, then the drive towards non-death sterility-as-paradise *eliminates* character: the human biomass of this book act and react as children, often inventing drama to make the day-by-day immortal grind interesting (a relatively inoffensive break-in merits a full investigation). The author cleverly narrates his dystopia of "perfection" through the circuits of Penster, a robot Belvedere, serving his keepers with an internal sneer, a relic of potential revolution, part mad-scientist lackey, part world-dominator in embryo, the soul of the book - in itself an ironic presentation. Penster, having access to the artifacts of the Age of Death, erects a labyrinth for his subjects to navigate, hoping they will see through the artificial constraints of processed life to grasp what life is - even calculating the inevitable *resistance* to change that characterizes so much human behavior...

The author of EVE worked for decades in the animation trade before deciding to take up the pen for a different reason: instead of drawing cute cuddlies for children to veg out to on Saturday morning (in itself a technological babysitter and paradigm-shaper), he develops a whole cast of fantastical creatures which serve every necessary aspect of human need, endlessly reproducible and recyclable, from tongue-lashing dishwashers to grotesque Tee-Vees, from crowing AlarmCocks to grazing Johndeers; this pantheon of imagination, a structural support for utopia, both tickles the reader and disturbs, particularly the BeddinBuddies, sexual toys with pinheads (*shudder*...) - while reading through the text, I could easily imagine EVE depicted as a PG-13 Pixar film.

Aside from the distressing po-mo construct of biomass / death elimination, EVE shines in great part due to the intervals of humorous happenstance & reflection (Penster, the amoral dictator-clown, comes into his own during Eve's training) and the dollops of deeper wisdom inserted here and there to maximize thematic development. Highly recommended.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Biopoetics: The Creature Mill of Aurelio O'Brien, January 26, 2006
By 
In (East Brunswick, NJ, United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: EVE (Paperback)
When biomass is abundant (and recyclable), life is cheap.

In the 31st century, all lifeforms are gene-mapped and alterable. Biotech is an all-purpose thaumaturgy that can terraform landscapes (and people) with the swipe of a barcode. The gene for aging has been hacked, and Dr. Frankenfurter's "Don't dream it, be it!" has infantilized the planet. Human-to-human relations have largely obsolesced, by every immortal citizen (unlawful carnal woopie has been banned, a relic of the Age of Death) being granted his own private Xanadu, a protean biomorphic rumpus room of ever-flowing wish fulfillment. A candi-colored Land of the Dead.

The Future is cuddly, and EVE is Dystopia fueled by high-fructose corn syrup, splashed in Dr. Seuss primary colors. All pleasures manufactured, copyrighted, bar coded, and utterly futile. GenieCorp, the sole remaining monopoly, has granted humanity all its wishes, resulting in a wholesale inner apocalypse. Except for Govil's creation of Eve (an illegally bred human), life seems to be extinct here on Planet X. The abolition of death only multiplies it a thousandfold, as Borges knew.

The texture of O'Brien's world seems an eerie inversion of the Flintstones (!), with dinosaur appliances replaced by gene-hacked "CreatureComforts," adorable mutant hybrids of fluffy pet and household widget: AlarmCocks, LarvaLamps, HeavenScents (skunk potpourries that squirt pine scent), and even Volksvaagenbugs (which crawl and/or fly). All are recyclable into a soupy all-purpose ectoplasm (ye olde metal-and-plastic technologies gather dust in museum basements), a spiraling eco-holocaust of fractal biomass.

O'Brien's go-getting parallel world glows with a Pixar luminescence, its flora and fauna as psychedelic as H.R. Pufnstuf.

But then there's Pentser, the wry comedian and robot panopticon (he has secretly installed pinhole-cameras throughout the precincts of the novel, allowing him to double as 1st- and 3rd-person narrator). Part Asimovian robot chum, part scheming overlord bent on world domination, Pentser is the plucky joy and fatal weakness of the novel, a gnashing mill of cognitive dissonance, achieving heights of squirrelly illogic worthy of a self-aware AI.

Pentser is programmed not to lie, but clearly *desires* to do so (human nature has piggybacked into his neural circuits), and his quirkily Napoleonic agenda to elevate Machinekind proves him a true exemplar of the occult "emotion" he claims to have no knowledge or experience of. Sexual sizzle and romantic love are a particular puzzler, even though Pentser has surely had access to the human literary and scientific canons, and could've hacked the algorithm of human mating strategies (and their biological underpinnings) like a Japanese kid solving a Rubik's Cube.

Pentser is an ascetic, assured of his own perfection, but "perfection" is indefinable, or at least, Pentser self-defeatingly defines it in crassly human terms ("power and efficiency"), and so the rise of Machinekind becomes, perversely, the neural exoskeleton of humankind colonizing its own host-organism, the tail wagging the dog. If O'Brien writes another Pentser novel, he is beholden to give an account of his robot's deeply irascible HUMANITY, in all its crass denial of true motives, its simmering core of man-made machinic libido. Pentser is a formidable liar, particularly when he's deceiving himself. Much like another well-known "omniscient intelligence," Pentser is blissfully unaware of the paradoxes that gird his toxic self-assurance (unsurprisingly, the Bible was banned in the year 2132 for "too much sex and violence"). "Truth" is a dicey human trope, and may always be an enigma to Pentser, an inheritance from "imperfect humanity."

Cynics will argue that EVE teaches us nothing new, that its secrets, passions, and puckish comic whimsy have already been charted by the wily slipstream yarns of Sturgeon, Davidson, Sheckley, Vonnegut, Rucker, Stephenson, di Filippo, Lethem, Noon, and Cory Doctorow. One might also kvetch that Eve's schmaltzy courtroom harangue on True Love and Family Values towards the end is a roundhouse kick to the gag plexus, but pat endings and stock moral-hygiene are very difficult for virgin novelists like O'Brien to resist. EVE is a tautly structured book, with tons of quirky asides (like the bioengineering of factory-farm animals whose pain receptors have been rewired into their pleasure centers, so that they enjoy being slaughtered! Take that, PETA!), but there are just as many nose-dives into corny triteness, into a breezy mock-up world of ho-hum two-dimensionality.

O'Brien seems to be aware of the cliches he's filtering through his narrative chutes and ladders. But my real problem with EVE is its exasperating lack of TACTILITY. The text often reads more like a Pixar storyboard than a vigilantly textured novel. I visually understand, for instance, what an AlarmCock "is," but telling us merely that it "crows" is an injury to its latent, embryonic nuance, a snag in the narrative fabric, to our immersion in O'Brien's imaginary world. What we're left with is cartooning, and the worst way to animate a cartoon dystopia of dead souls (the world under GenieCorp) is to employ a cartoon syntax. The more fantastical your world is, the more concrete its minutiae need be. Otherwise the whole enterprise is in danger of filtering through our system like a sugary pap of empty calories, that candy bar pop and zing followed by a quick channel flip.

The soul of Pentser is at stake. The world of Govil, Eve, Juune, Moord, Maedla, Eendth, and the rest of EVE's cast has abolished death at the expense of understanding that Meaning and Finitude are the two flip sides of a single mortal coin. Perhaps when Pentser turns his panopticon to the stars, has his fiberoptic ego shrunken by the vastness of the aeons, the Age of Death will return in all its rousing encumbrance, restore Pentser to his core humanity, to everything he denies he is.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Wild, whacky, fun, June 19, 2006
By 
Reader/author (LA, California USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: EVE (Hardcover)
Imagination like this is almost as rare as original ideas. I had a lot of fun with this oddly touching book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A biology major's dream . . ., May 19, 2006
By 
This review is from: EVE (Paperback)
Eve, by Aurelio O'Brien, is a good book for people interested in biology.

The story is a look into the future, when mankind has mastered biology, and uses his mastery to improve life on the planet earth. This interesting spin is a far cry from other futuristic stories that have mankind dominated by machines. However, there is a robot named Pentser that causes trouble throughout the book.

I found Eve to be a nice escape from the world, and an entertaining novel. I'm interested to see what the movie will be like.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Tale of Dark Whimsy, A Thousand Years Hence, September 6, 2004
By 
J. C. Hulett (Los Angeles, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: EVE (Paperback)
Imagine yourself far in the future. Now imagine yourself living in a time when machines are gone, but the comforts of the modern world are all at your fingertips -- via bio-engineering.

If you've imagined it, you have most likely read "Eve," author Aurelio O'Brien's take on the way things will one day be -- as told through the eyes of a robot named Pentser. The robot's master Govil searches for love...and finds it in a biologically designed woman who Govil has constructed illegally. The future, you see, belongs to long-lived humans who bio-engineer their cars, their household appliances, almost their entire lives. None of these "machines" are machines, you see, but living things that take the place of dishwashers and automobiles and...almost everything else.

It's a tale as only the last surviving automaton could tell it. For further details (and delights) buy the book here, or click on www.evethenovel.com

Happy futuring!
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4.0 out of 5 stars You Can Have Anything You Want, But You Have To "Show Your Butt", June 28, 2009
By 
Despina Yeargin (Greenwood, South Carolina) - See all my reviews
This review is from: EVE (Paperback)
"Eve" offers up a humorous look at the future of mankind. A science-fiction tale told through the observant and clever Pentser, an illegally operated robot, the story takes us to a futuristic Utopia, where life is forever and everything you want is yours. Life is good, or is it? With tongue-in-cheek, the novel shows us that balance in life is important and that getting what you want isn't always what you need.

In O'Brien's debut novel, mankind has evolved to live forever, but never age and always have every need tended to. Now called Randoms, the humans in this story have all types of bio-engineered and recyclable CreatureComforts(tm) ever-present to tend to their needs. Govil, one of the key characters, is feeling as if something is missing and decides to bio-engineer and manufacture a Random with the help of, Pentser. So Govil, who could any day be arrested for activating a robot, now works with Pentser to "birth" Eve, his first attempt at manufacturing a Random. Eve is born as an adult, but must be taught as a child. Because mankind (a.k.a. Randoms) live forever, there is plenty of time, and Govil is pleased with himself. Life seems perfect now that he has Eve, but is it?

It's the 31st century and all you can dream of is available to you. Yes, it's all yours for the asking and it won't cost you a penny, but you do have to "show your butt". To see what I'm talking about, grab your own copy of "Eve" and turn off the TeeVee©
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4.0 out of 5 stars EVE is a delightful romp through a twisted future utopia., May 25, 2009
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This review is from: EVE (Hardcover)
Eve is a fun bit of silliness. Wait... that sounds like it is empty headed... which it is not. Amid all the creativity that jumped off the page and into my mind, there is a core of substance. How does one define a "utopia"? What separates humanity from nature around us? Who are you if you can change the physical aspect of your being? What does it mean to be human?

I was entertained. It was a fun spin on a future world that is all its own. I highly recommend it.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Good 19th Century romance in the 31st Century, July 14, 2005
By 
Paul Lappen (Manchester, CT USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: EVE (Paperback)
Govil is a man born in the wrong century. In the tradition of all great 19th Century heroes, he needs a great cause, so he creates for himself a living mate named Eve. But that's easy for Govil to do.

Earth of the 31st Century is a very strange sort of place. There are no births or deaths; everyone is immortal. Everyone is sterile, because things like sex and families have been outlawed; so have war, disease and famine. All of mankind's needs are taken care of by Genie Corp (the only corporation on Earth), makers of biological Creature Comforts. Among their creations are JohnDeer, a multi-headed deer used as a lawn mower, an AlarmCock, the head of a rooster with little feet and HeavenScent, a skunk that sprays air freshener. Therefore, it is nothing for Govil to create a deliberately average human. The hard part is keeping it quiet.

Eve's education is left in the hands of an obsolete robot named Pentser, the narrator of this book. Years later, after Eve is able to function on her own, she is told the truth about her origins. By this time, Govil has fallen for her. The not-very-diligent investigation finally learns the truth, and the three are hauled into court. While Eve is sentenced to be recycled, it is revealed that Govil is not the only one with a secret "relationship."

This one is pretty good. It's a good future social speculation mixed with a 19th Century romance and includes some very weird bits of genetic engineering. Get past the strange front cover, and this one is worth reading.

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4.0 out of 5 stars future man, old robot & very human yearnings!, March 13, 2005
By 
Rebecca Brown "rebeccasreads" (Clallam Bay, WA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: EVE (Hardcover)
Rebeccasreads recommends EVE from Aurelio O'Brien's debut pen as a funny, well-written "what-if" satire.

Told from the robot's point of view, we watch as his "master" makes an "organic woman" in a perfect brand-name world.

Plenty of "through the looking-glass" winces & chuckles!
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EVE
EVE by Aurelio O'Brien (Paperback - July 19, 2004)
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