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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great piece of "social science fiction", August 7, 2002
By A Customer
This is a book I will never forget. It's one of those ones you recommend to everyone you think is worthy of it, but don't want to actually lend out for fear you won't get it back. It's a great story if you're open-minded, a Freudian, a not-exactly-Christian, or any combination thereof. How nice to find an enjoyable piece of fiction that actually makes you think about your life and personal philosophy. And from a pure story-telling standpoint, there is a GREAT twist at the end.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars In the tradition of Orwell and Nietzsche..., May 12, 1999
By A Customer
I have been looking for a copy of this book since I read it several times (and subsequently gave it away) years ago. Especially fascinating is the authors' use of a "border-crosser" or guerrilla-type figure who, as one of the main characters, crosses boundaries between hyper-city and rural community in a post-Apocalyptic age, thus allowing us to reflect upon our own circumstances, plight, and so on as people caught between and inside fractured communities of all shapes and sizes and flavours. The book is imbued with Nietzschean values and has a tinge of Orwell's Burmese Days to it, in the sense that it conveys a tangible feeling of exile throughout (which 1984 does, as well). The authors have a gift of expressing philosophy in a novel that is both provocative and a joy to read. Write more, guys!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favs, September 23, 2005
It's been a long time since I last read this book, and time does have a tendency to change one's perceptions, but I still remember this one fondly. It blends any number of features that alone would make a great story into a complete whole, something so few books do.

I particularily liked the quality of the writing. The narrative as Arin "goes sane" with the help of an imaginary friend always struck me as particularily well written, and his emergance as an instrument of retribution afterwards a particularily believable bit of character development.

A thought provoking read all around.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Masters of Solitude- an engaging book, May 6, 2004
CHARACTER SUMMARY

Garick- money-savvy god of the Shando, one of the covens; people of covens possess telepathy ("lep")
Jenna- Goddess of Shando; second wife of Garick
Judith- Born in City; deceased; former wife of Garick
Singer- Wanderer; son of Garick and Judith; possesses the ability to possess others
Arin- Shando leader; son of Garick and Jenna; sent on quest by Garick to unite covens
Uriah- Leader of Kriss (future Christians); plots to subjugate covens with bubonic plague
Jeremiah- Kriss; son of Uriah; leads "merks" (mercenaries) and pays them to kill coveners

PLOT SUMMARY

Garick, educated by Judith about the technology and medicine of City, aims to obtain City cooperation, education, and technology for his people. For this reason, he sends Arin to unite the covens. He also asks that Arin go to the dead city Lishin, in the land of the Kriss, to find the location of the Girdle of Solitude, a device that makes the wearer completely undetectable. With this device he hopes to pass the Self Gate, a force field around City that annihilates all that pass through it by canceling out their brain with negative complementary signals. When Arin enters the Kriss city of Salvation, he meets Uriah. After being detained for weeks, he finally goes to Lishin and faces the formless horror that lurks there-and discovers that the horror is rats. Rats that carry plague. He is driven insane by the rats, then drives one of the Kriss insane to discover Uriah's plot. When Garick learns of it, he mobilizes the covens that have joined him and slaughters the Kriss in the night. Then comes Jeremiah. He hires every merk in the South and mobilizes to destroy Garick and get revenge. Garick and Jeremiah meet at the fields of Dannyline, and engage in battle, Jeremiah using weapons that shoot burning jelly, called throwers. After suffering heavy casualties and getting a burned-up arm, Garick forces the merks to surrender. But there is still the Self Gate. In a curious twist, we discover that Singer has been with Arin for an unknown amount of time. With Singer's mind inside his head, forcing him along, Arin does the impossible-he passes the Self Gate. Once inside, he convinces the head administrator of City to cooperate with the outside world. The City contacts the outside world, and... the book ends, prepared for Wintermind, its sequel. This was a highly captivating book, set in the far future of America.

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Fantasy, September 14, 1998
By A Customer
I loved this book. It is one of the greatest books that I have ever read. I suggest that anybody that wants to read a good story about a time and a place far away, yet seems so familiar, then get this book
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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Super fantastic., September 14, 1998
By A Customer
I have read this book over 5 times. It is totally engrossing. The characters and plotline are complex and believable. Underlying message (philosophy) makes the book worth reading many times. Each time I have read it I get something more out of it.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a well written and engrossing work, May 10, 1998
By A Customer
the combination fo characters and excitement come together to form a breathtaaking work that is impossible to put down
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