From Library Journal
An eerie alien vegetation begins spreading across the African landscape and transforms everything and everyone it touches. Irish reporter Gaby McAslin, drawn to this otherworldly phenomenon, finds herself caught in a mystery in the heart of a strange, new world. McDonald (Terminal Cafe, Spectra: Bantam, 1995) consistently explores new territory with his breathtaking images and incisive language. Both form and substance blend fortuitously in a work that features strong characters, a suspenseful story, and a profound message of hope and transformation. A priority purchase for sf collections.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
McDonald's fandom will recognize his latest novel as a reworking of his 1990 novelette "Towards Kilimanjaro." Gaby McAslan is an Irish reporter who pins her hopes of journalistic fame on covering an anomalous meteor crash on Mt. Kilimanjaro. Occurring on the heels of the shocking disappearance of Saturn's moon, Hyperion, the crash stirs further alarm from the mysterious outgrowth of rapidly spreading alien plant life, dubbed the Chaga, that follows it. McAslan's moment of glory arrives when she discovers a man who has survived among the Chaga for years and was not only fed and warmed by it but is slowly turning into a Chaga life-form. As the mysterious infestation continues to envelop Central Africa, it transforms everyone who encounters it, inspiring testimonials to both its fundamental beneficence and its unfathomable strangeness. McDonald sets aside the edgy, stylized technospeak of his previous novels to make a complex exploration of otherworldly intelligence that matches the scope of such alien-probing classics as Lem's
Solaris. Another masterwork from one of sf's leading voices.
Carl Hays
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