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Elvene: The Kiri Myth of Ocean Woman
 
 

Elvene: The Kiri Myth of Ocean Woman [Kindle Edition]

Paul Mealing
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Elvene, a solo Space Corps agent, is on a reconnaissance mission when she is ambushed by space marauders: militaristic robotic drones, designed to hunt and kill.

She escapes by taking refuge on an uncharted planet, where she discovers the Kiri, an unknown tribe living a subsistence life on an ocean archipelago. They have no knowledge of her world nor her of theirs; but they readily adopt her and give her the title of Ocean Woman.

Elvene responds in kind, temporarily forgetting the tribulations of her own world. Inevitably, however, her past catches up with her and endangers the very people who embraced her.

The Kiri not only challenge everything Elvene thought she knew about humanity, but provide a friendship and love that leads her to consider the ultimate sacrifice.

Paul Mealing lives in Melbourne and, when he is not writing and philosophising, he works as a project controls engineer in the construction industry.

His background has been varied and includes share farming in the mallee of NSW and amateur theatre in Canberra.

His interests include science, religion and philosophy. He started writing fiction and screenplays in the 1980s, but Elvene is his first published novel.

He had stopped writing altogether, but, during an overseas assignment in the US , he got the idea for Elvene while watching a trailer on a video, which had a female protagonist in a Sci-fi anime. He later acknowledged an influence from Mamoru Oshii's 1995 cult classic, Ghost in the Shell (not the trailer or the video he was watching at the time), which, going by an endorsement on the DVD, may have also inspired James Cameron's Dark Angel series.

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 470 KB
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0044XUWJI
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #627,459 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb sci-fi by an Aussie polymath, July 27, 2011
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This review is from: Elvene: The Kiri Myth of Ocean Woman (Kindle Edition)
I found this gem after the author had left several insightful comments on a philosophy blog that we both occasionally frequent. I ordered the book before it became available on amazon and thoroughly enjoyed it.

Elvene is the story of a coupling between Elvene, a Space Core officer from Old Earth and Myka, a young "primitive" Kiri tribesman from a life bearing planet in an unchartered sector of the universe. This story (which I won't give away here) has it all: the loyal shipboard computer, chasing robotic drones, tasteful sex scenes, vivid description and fluid storytelling. Here's just a brief sample:

"Marauders [i.e. the robotic drones], however, weren't always so predictable, and trying to second guess them was inevitably a gamble. By their very nature they evolved strategies in the same way that they evolved their own mechanisms. They had effectively become an independent species, spawned by humankind and now a menace to the colonised universe. It was a mistake to believe that they thought like humans; their creativity was blind but no less effective. They were an evolving form of machinery with the ability to form strategies, co-operate, use experience as their compass to the future, and most significantly of all, to survive by Darwinian domination of all other technologies. They perceived humans as another form of technology rather than another species of nature, hence the perpetual conflict and struggle for supremecy" (page 161).

Written largely while the author was waylaid in Montreal, Elvene will be a welcome purchase or gift for anyone who enjoys what I will describe a throwback sci-fi. Mealing is like a cross between Philip Jose Farmer and James Blish - I just wish he would write another one of these.
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