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The Gods and Their Machines [Bargain Price] [Hardcover]

Oisin McGann (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 1, 2004
The Gods and Their Machines marks the debut of a compelling new voice in science fiction and fantasy, set in a world that bears a disturbing resemblance to the Middle East and the conflict between Israel and Palestine.

To the scientifically advanced people of Altima, the primitive "Fringelanders" of Bartokhrin are superstitious barbarians and terrorists. Their suicide warriors carry dark magic into the heart of the Altiman cities, killing innocent civilians. To the people of Bartokhrin, the Altimans are godless conquerors and oppressors, who bomb their town and villages from their high-flying aeroplanes. They revere the Blessed martyrs who carry the battle back to the Altimans.

Chamus Aranson is a young Altiman student, training to be a fighter pilot in his nation's air force. Riadni Mocranen is a rebellious Bartokhrian tomboy, who dreams of joining the heroic freedom fighters in their crusade against Altima. Chamus and Riadni come from two completely different worlds, but when Chamus is forced to make and emergency landing deep in enemy country, Riadni becomes his only hope for survival. Now they must work together to stop an unimaginable catastrophe from setting both their worlds on fire.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Earnest good intentions may earn respect for Irish author McGann’s first SF/fantasy novel, but they can’t quite bring the book to life. The relatively modern, urban country of Altima denigrates and exploits its rural, backward neighbor, Bartokhrin, leading to low-level but escalating conflict. When readers are introduced first to Chamus, a young Altiman lad who loves flying and hates terrorists, then to Riadni, a Bartokhrian tomboy who loves horses and despises foreign overlords, they may suspect that the two will meet, fight, be forced to depend on each other and eventually come to appreciate the "enemy’s" way of life. It also seems likely that Chamus and Riadni will use their mature understanding to thwart the bloody plans of childish old men on both sides. And so it happens in this YA-level parable with lessons that bear on the current crisis in the Middle East. McGann tackles genuine problems, but the novel’s world isn’t developed independently enough to feel real, apart from its contemporary references. The story’s conclusion is underdeveloped also, with a burst of good feeling instead of a real presentation of how these different people can learn to live together. Unfortunately, merely wanting to say something important isn’t enough.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

Gr. 8-11. To Altiman teenager and trainee fighter-pilot Chamus, the people of bordering Bartokhrin are just Fringelanders--backward religious fanatics whose women wear geishalike makeup and wigs and whose men occasionally appear in Altima to commit a kind of supernatural version of jihad. But when Chamus crashes his plane near the home of a Bartokhrin young woman named Riadni, the two are thrown into a reluctant alliance, with ramifications that are as personally jolting as they are politically far-reaching. Although the protagonists' coincidental ties to key leaders on both sides require a significant suspension of disbelief, the action hurtles forward deliciously, and the alternating narratives build sympathies for both protagonists as they grapple with "a situation so big and so brutal that there was no way to make sense of it." The real-world parallels with Western secularism and the more traditional societies of the Middle East are clear, but McGann's facility with both character and world building makes this impressive debut as rewarding as pure fantasy as it is as provocative allegory. Jennifer Mattson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0765311593
  • ASIN: B000H2NAX0
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.4 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,934,055 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent First Novel, February 23, 2005
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The Gods and Their Machines is a top notch young adult science fiction novel and an allegory for the viscous cycle of real life, modern day terrorism. The story is set on an unnamed planet where two nations are in a state of undeclared war that is carried out through terrorism. One side, the Altima, are technologically advanced for their planet, live in urban settings, and have a generally high standard of living. The Bartokhrin are technologically behind, poorer, and live in a rural, pastoral setting. Each have ugly stereotypes of the other, some of it deserved. The Bartokhrins are seen by the Altimans as backward, superstitious, barbaric people who carry out terrorist attacks in Altiman cities against innocent civilians without provocation. The Bartokhrin see the Altiman as a rich, spoiled, powerful people who have stripped and used Bartokhrin resources to the detriment of their ecology and economy. Not surprisingly, the Altiman carry out their campaign against the Bartokhrin using their superior power and technology. The Bartokhrin use terrorist tactics such as suicide bombers and assassination.

The story centers on two young people, Chamus Aranson, whose father and grandfather are politically powerful men in Altiman society and Riadni Mocranen, a rebellious young Bartokhrin tomboy who rebels against her father and naively goes off to join the terrorist movement in her state - the Hadram Cassal. Each of these young people have grown up socialized to hate the other and believe with religious passion the negative stereotypes of the others' people. They have also each experienced first hand the terror the others' society has inflicted upon their respective states. Chamus, on a flight training exercise, crashes into the "fringelands," the home of the Bartokhrin, where Riadni comes across him. Riadni shows her humanity by not turning him over to the Hassam Cassal who would surely hold him hostage and may eventually kill him, thus getting herself into trouble with this violent faction when they discover her deception. These two are thrown together in a situation where they must depend on each other to escape their circumstances and survive, while learning the truths, and untruths, about each other and their people.

What makes this an excellent novel is the clever way McGann pulls the curtain aside and shows how mostly false stereotypes and lack of understanding lead to the seemingly intractable hatred and tit-for-tat violence that rends these two different peoples apart. It's a perfect example of how modern day terrorism and systemic violence has torn apart the Middle East and Ireland, to name a few examples. But it goes further to show that there are nefarious and evil people on both sides of the conflict. Stereotypes aren't born in a vacuum, they inevitably have a kernel or more of truth to them. And the use of two young people thrown together in a life or death situation who have grown up to hate the other but still are open minded enough to learn about each other, however reluctantly, offers hope for the future of their society. This is the strength and heart of this novel.

There are a few minor drawbacks. Occasionally there are some inconsistencies on the part of the characters that are forgivable but noticeable. Another slight quibble is the author never explains, even briefly, the origins of this planet and it's obviously human citizens. Finally, at times, the story drags a little. But these are minor faults for well done first novel.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A different kind of fantasy world, December 9, 2004
I'm not sure if this is science fiction or fantasy or what, but I know I loved it. I'm not normally into this stuff, but this story was real in a way that science ficton often isn't. It's got a definite political theme, there are nods to the Middle East and maybe Ireland too (McGann's from Dublin in Ireland) but it's not preachy. Its like he's thinking out loud. Mostly thought, this is a fantastic adventure story, with crackpot suicidal assasins, menacing machines, corrupt warmongers and all the tension and action you can ask for. I loved the scene when Benyan is taken over by the ghosts, and the fight with the gliders was brilliant. Chamus rocks! Riadni's my type of girl too, plenty of fire in her. The book's being sold as Young Adult, but the themes as Adult as you get and theres' nothing childish about it. This is a thriller with brains and guts. I can't wait to see what else this guy is going to write.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Refreshingly innovative fantasy, November 25, 2004
Altima is the dominant nation in the area with its advanced technology making it so "superior" to its neighbors. Altima depends on its backward neighbors for raw materials including cheap labor that are especially used in its highly sophisticated manufacturing sector.

The largest border nation is the fundamentally religious Bartokhrin, an agricultural society that treats females as subservient yet worships the Goddess Shanna. Most Bartokhrins detest their powerful secular neighbor. However a small group also loathes the ungodliness of Altima and has begun a terrorist war to rid Bartokhrin of all ties with Altima. Priests use the mortiphas effect to provide volunteers with negative psychic energies that convert them into living bombs to wreck Altima. As Altima plans to devastate Bartokhrin with a military assault, plots abound to assassinate leaders felt to soft on terrorism.

A terrorist attack kills the family of teenager Chamus Aranson, whose obsession to fly has changed to kill all Bartokhrins. While flying, he makes an emergency landing in Bartokhrin where he meets tomboy Riadni Mocranen, who is his only hope to elude captivity, but neither understands the values of the other.

THE GODS AND THEIR MACHINES is a terrific allegorical speculative fiction that grips the audience from the moment that readers grasp the radical differences between the two societies and never slows down until the final symbolic twist. The story line is action-packed and contains two delightfully daring diverse heroes. Still the parable makes this a compelling read as Oisin McGann has furbished a deep thought-provoking novel. Fans of several genres will reconsider the post 9/11 testosterone actions and reactions of country and terrorist leaders.

Harriet Klausner
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First Sentence:
This was not his nightmare. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
yellow biplane
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Hadram Cassai, Hadram Cassal, Lakrem Elbeth, Thomex Aranson, Master Elbeth, Miss Mocranen, Benyan Akhna, Brother Fazekiel, Sleeping Hill, Blessing of the Martyrs, Charnus Aranson, Commander Ellese, Machel Tower, Olam Waymath, Sostas Mocranen
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