7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
His Masterpiece, March 3, 2002
One of the most beautiful, thought-provoking sci-fi novels ever written. To put it quite simply, this book is brilliant; easily ranks as one of Silverberg's best novels...
Written during Robert Silverberg's artistic/creative peak (the 1980's), this book deals with the complex issues of personal faith, spiritualism and religion... it is at times violent, passionate, poetic, sensual, symbolic & profound... and it will leave you speechless...
Silverberg also introduced some of his most sympathetic, likable characters here... anyone who has ever faced an obstacle or dealt with a disability (mental or physical) will surely find inspiration in the character of Tom.
I've had my hardback copy for 15 years; it's one of my all-time favorite novels and I would recommend this book to anyone interested in learning what GOOD sci-fi is all about.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Haunting and powerful, April 10, 1999
Probably the best book Silverberg has written, in my opinion. Left me thinking for weeks about the nature of religion and humanity's relationship to the unknowable. It doesn't offer any easy answers, but rather poses the *real* questions better than almost any book I know of -- and knowing what the questions really are is the most important step in finding the answers.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An original concept deftly handled, June 19, 2009
This is a very different book by the science-fiction master, Robert Silverberg. It's set in a world that has been decimated by war and a declining civilization, peppered with abandoned cities and ruin countryside. The titular character wanders over California (including a destroyed 'great city' Sacramento, a case may be made that it's already well on its way to ruin...). He sees fantastic visions of a beautiful, but utterly alien landscape, peopled with haunting aliens.
I don't think this is Silverberg's best work (The Majipoor Chronicles, Nightwings, Sailing to Byzantium, Dying Inside), but that still puts it well above the norm.
Tom O'Bedlam refers to a famous poem about a wandering man, probably crazy, definitely a beggar, with a dangerous air about him, claiming to be late of Bedlam (the prototypical mental hospital in England). Mr. Silverberg took inspiration from the poem since he cites passages of said in the book.
In any case, the thing I liked best about the novel was the fantastic imagery of what appears to be a very advanced civilization that comes to Tom. The visions become more and more real and distinct as time goes on, and they appear to want to use Tom as a weird sort of liaison between the fantastic and the profane of Earth.
Recommended. It's a fresh concept with a few disturbing elements thrown in.
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