- Paperback: 244 pages
- Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill (2001)
- ASIN: B000S725B2
- Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Song of the Earth sings.,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Song of the Earth (Hardcover)
Hugh Nissenson's new book, Song of the Earth, is hard to catogorize. In this work, Nissenson uses the written word, the visual image, and a non-narrative style to compliment each other, to produce a memorable picture of an artist and his art. The picture gradually emerging is of a man struggling with issues of existence and creativity made poignant by his enhanced capabilities, in the richly portrayed landscape of the future. It could be seen as sci-fi with its troubling vision of the future, plausably extrapolated from current scientific knowledge. It could be seen as an exploration of social developments where political, religious, and sexual preferences and practices are at once accepted and celebrated while the frictions of these varying life styles lead to bitter conflict. It could be seen as the exploration of the homoerotic life of his protagonist, as he pursues the yearnings of lust and affection. It could be seen as a chronical of artistic struggle and an exploration of the place art plays in the world. This last is developed using startling original art created by the author in his development of these themes seen through the eyes of his characters. Finally it can be seen as a skillful merging of artistic modalities, demonstrating the synergistic enhancement of expression. The result will satisfy those interested in any of these possible catagories.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Style & Thought,
By "purpcowboy" (NYC, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Song of the Earth (Hardcover)
Where the PW review states the style, one of culled ficticious emails, web page posts, historical records & interviews as eventually becomming "distracting," I felt that the style was the main thrust of Hugh Nissenson's "The Song of the Earth." This style helped keep the story fresh & moving quickly, as I could see a "straight" narrative covering the same subject matter drone on & be quite preachy. Nissenson's style never approaches this & yet is quite chilling & a fantastic warning of where our collective gobal village future is headed. I was initially drawn to the book due to its haunting cover & Cynthia Ozick's strong review who stated: "Any reader who believes that, after Joyce, the novel can no longer give rise to the absolutely innovative and the absolutely astonishing will be shocked into revelation by...Song of the Earth." Indeed, the one quip I have is that there is a lot of homosexual content, something you do not get from the jacket and something I was not expecting due to that fact. In retrospect, I believe it served me better as I quickly became enveloped by Nissenson's world and the various plots at hand. In all, from a tried & true Gene Wolfe lover, I really enjoyed this book. I love books that inspire new thinking & this is one. Its engaging & spirited and better yet, "light" and "dark" at the same time. A true song of earth's not-so-distant future.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Just Around The Corner,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Song of the Earth (Hardcover)
In this book, Nissenson has transcended to a new plane of current fiction. Not only is the subject matter bold, daring and temporally topical, but the treatment of the subject matter and the stylilistic aspects of the book, make this my selection for leading candidtate for the National Book Award this year.The book, written in an epistolary style, which usually means letters, but in this case, are much closer to an "e-mail" format than a letter format. The style allows Nissenson to be alternatingly personal and intense versus removed and obscure, from message to message, giving him amazing stylistic versatility, which he utilizes to great advantage. Additionally, the book is a "multi-media" piece in that it mixes the media of written text with artistic visual creations and the use of "e-mail" as an expositional vehicle all in one piece of literature, which he then uses to give the reader an extrapolation of what is to come just around the corner in today's society. Today cloning has just started. Tomorrow, there will be science that allows us to change "congenitally deleterious" genetic problems, but what other detrimental effects might those "genetic corrections" contain, and might those horrible effects be only known after 100 or 1000 generations? These are in fact the questions that we will have to wrestle with and who is to say, which is an 'OK' genome change and which is not legal? As if this were not enough, Nissenson, may even be prescient in detecting the growing polarization of men and women in today's society. Not only are the viewpoints of these two necessary groups polarizing, but even the issue of self-sexual identity is becoming a problem for people in society today, no less 50 to 100 years from now. Nissenson leaves no issue unaddressed and all serious modern literature readers should look to read this book, just to keep current with issues, if not for Nissenson's incredible craftsmanship.
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