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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fun for fans of literary SF and media SF too
I haven't even finished the book yet, I don't read quite as much as I used to anymore, but this book has me right back to loving to read. I don't need to synopsize it for you cause there are already plenty of those above. But if you like Star Trek and enjoy any kind of narrative complexity, or if you *hate* Star Trek and just love a good read, this is a really fun...
Published on December 22, 1998

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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Preternaturally pretentious
I guess it's true that there's no accounting for taste. Some people apparently liked this book a lot, but I found it a confusing, boring mish-mash of ideas that failed to jell (or jellyfish) for me.

The multiple points-of-view, timeline-manipulation and fourth-wall-breaking can work, but not in this book. In fact, I have the distinct impression that the author got her...

Published on October 6, 2003 by Scott R. Lucado


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fun for fans of literary SF and media SF too, December 22, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Preternatural (Paperback)
I haven't even finished the book yet, I don't read quite as much as I used to anymore, but this book has me right back to loving to read. I don't need to synopsize it for you cause there are already plenty of those above. But if you like Star Trek and enjoy any kind of narrative complexity, or if you *hate* Star Trek and just love a good read, this is a really fun book. Kind of reminds me of a similar book, about a fantasy writer who got involved with the reality of her fantasy, someone email me with the title and author if you can remember it, that one was also literary-experimental and still easy-to-read. About ten years ago, I think the author was Kathryn something. In-something...
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A phantasmagorical carnival ride!, March 20, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Preternatural (Hardcover)
A science fiction novel about a science fiction writer who writes a novel about a race of extraterrestrial telepathic jellyfish, the Egyptian pharoh Akhenaton, a female cousin of Jesus Christ, theories of creation and evolution, characters based on William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy and Shirley McClaine, alternate universes, a dying artist, and the librarian of the ancient city of Alexandria (all of which may or may not really exist)!! If this sounds like a confusing mess, it's not. Margaret Wander Bonanno whips us through this crazy novel like a rickety metal cart speeding through an amusment park thrill ride, keeping her steady hand on the controls all the way to the end. If Bonanno's next work improves on this one, she'll be an easy favorite for a Hugo or Nebula award. This is the kind of writing for which the phrase "tour de force" was invented! Fasten your seat belts, it's going to be a bumpy read!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars PRETERNATURAL is worth sorting out the initial confusion., March 12, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Preternatural (Hardcover)
PRETERNATURAL is so oddly delightful There are tons of inside literary references, and I suspect the more widely read one is the more of these will surface. A suspension-of-disbelief reading attitude helps, and patience is well rewarded. I was pleased to note that this is only the first book. S
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An intricate recursive postmodern puzzle-piece. Highly recommended, July 20, 1999
This review is from: Preternatural (Paperback)
______________________________________________

Karen Rohmer Guerreri is writing an SF novel -- working title,

"Preternatural" -- by taking dictation from telepathic ET jellyfish in

her head. "Talking jellyfish!" sneers her soon-to-be ex-husband

Ray. "You'll never sell this!"

Ray's a jerk, but he's understandably upset -- he's been seeing

jellyfish too. As have most of the characters in the book. It's not

the sort of thing you, um, share with family & friends...

More plot summary than this really isn't going to help --

think "Wine of the Dreamers" meets Phillip K Dick, with all

*kinds* of genre, literary and TV/cinematic references

and in-jokes (I'm pretty dense about picking these up --

you'll likely catch more than I did). In the world of Academic

Lit. this is "self-referential deconstruction" and a Big Deal --

-- but in plain language it's an astonishing juggling act. Round and

round, up & down they go: autobiography, the writer's craft, how

your kids grew up while you weren't looking, Trekkie fangirl turns

pro, midlist writer goes to SF conventions, Hollywood business

deals ("trust me"), exposition by transposing characters to alternate

timelines(!), crystal healing, bilingual puns (the aliens' Linnean

name is S. oteri: sound it out & groan...), a Capt. Kirkish actor who

can't get it up & blames the jellyfish...

"If PRETERNATURAL has a flaw, it is that the reader must be

willing to keep so many balls in the air, trusting that the author

will eventually reveal how each fits into the pattern. Let me

assure you that Ms. Bonanno is worthy of your trust. She makes good

on all her promises, wrestling her puzzle to a satisfying draw..."

-- Gerald Jonas, NY Times, whose excellent review prompted me to

read this book. You should read it too [G00gle]

The jellyfish are a bit much at times

and the ending may be oversweet (though perfectly-fitted

to the cinematic subplot). Hey, nobody's perfect -- but Preternatural

comes pretty darn close.

Ms. Bonanno is the most prolific SF author I'd never heard of -- in

the past 20 years, she's written 2 Star Trek novels, 7 other novels

(some SF/F), and a biography of Angela Lansbury.

I have no idea why PRETERNATURAL has attracted so little

attention. This is a remarkable book, an "audacious act of

imagination that goes far beyond the merely clever. The puzzle that

she poses has to do with the nature of language. Why, in reading

fiction, do we suspend disbelief so totally as to care about the

fate of characters whom we encounter only as sequences of words

on paper? Why do we laugh or cry when the writer manipulates her

word-puppets into a simulacrum of personal growth?"

(G. Jonas, op. cit.)

Don't miss it. Trust me.

Review copyright 1999 by Peter D. Tillman

First published at SF Site
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Preternaturally pretentious, October 6, 2003
This review is from: Preternatural (Paperback)
I guess it's true that there's no accounting for taste. Some people apparently liked this book a lot, but I found it a confusing, boring mish-mash of ideas that failed to jell (or jellyfish) for me.

The multiple points-of-view, timeline-manipulation and fourth-wall-breaking can work, but not in this book. In fact, I have the distinct impression that the author got her hands on a copy of Diderot's "Jacques the Fatalist" and decided to reprocess some of her half-baked ideas into a similar work. If so, it pales into transparency compared to Diderot brilliant work.

The author's love-hate relationship with her characters (and readers, I think) pushed and pulled me from paragraph to paragraph, and left me cold.

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5 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Awful., June 17, 1999
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Preternatural (Paperback)
It's clear that the author of this book was attempting to be clever with her allusions to various Star Trek-like actors. Unfortunately, it comes off as painfully precious. I have a hard time even describing how much I disliked this book. It is, hands down, the worst book I have read in years...boring, boring, boring.
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Preternatural
Preternatural by Margaret Wander Bonanno (Paperback - 1996)
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