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Sky Coyote (A Novel of the Company, Book 2)
 
 
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Sky Coyote (A Novel of the Company, Book 2) (Mass Market Paperback)

~ (Author) "YOU'LL UNDERSTAND THIS story better if I tell you a lie..." (more)
Key Phrases: sky canoes, security techs, astrologer priest, Sky Coyote, New World One, Sea People (more...)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Kage Baker's first novel, In the Garden of Iden, was a smart, funny, top-drawer read. Fans will be happy to find out that Baker avoids a sophomore slump with Sky Coyote, the second novel of the Company, and another superbly witty and intelligent book. Baker switches focus in this sequel to Joseph, the immortal cyborg who rescued Iden's heroine, Mendoza, from the dungeons of the Spanish Inquisition. Joseph and Mendoza work for Dr. Zeus, otherwise known as the Company, a 24th-century operation devoted to getting rich off the past. To accomplish this, the Company turns orphans and refugees from the past into super-smart, nigh invincible cyborgs and sends them on missions to save or hide precious paintings, cultural treasures, and genetic information useful to the future world.

Sky Coyote begins in pre-Columbian Mexico, where Joseph and Mendoza are reunited at New World One, an extravagant Company retreat. When European explorers are scheduled to arrive in the New World, the Company dismantles operations, and Joseph is sent to California in 1699 to save a Chumash village lock, stock, and barrel, before Europeans arrive with smallpox and slavery. To prep the Native Americans for their voyage to a Company enclave in Australia, Joseph poses as Uncle Sky Coyote, a trickster-god of the Chumash, and tells them he's there to save them from certain doom at the hands of white men. But can Joseph convince the wary, savvy Chumash labor unions, lodges, and entrepreneurs that he has their best interests at heart, all without screwing up history? And will he patch things up with Mendoza, who still hasn't forgiven him for everything that happened in 1500s England? Kage Baker delivers a terrific story and a worthy sequel with Sky Coyote. --Therese Littleton --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Publishers Weekly

Cunningly blending a pre-Columbian past with a 24th century extrapolated from every adult's nightmare about the younger generation, Baker's second installment in her Company series proves a witty match to In the Garden of Iden. Fresh from a cushy R&R after a supervisory stint in the Inquisition, time-hopping cyborg Facilitator Joseph jaunts to 16th-century Alta California. There, cybernetically outfitted with fur and paws, he apotheosizes to the cannily entrepreneurial Chumash Indian tribe so he can collect them and their entire biosystem for Company studies in the remote future. Joseph's Company is Baker's deliciously wicked platform for satirizing past, present and all-too-likely future human frailties. From sure-handed sendups of 24th-century Cinema Standard speech patterns and a dismayingly suggestive portrait of the Chumash Medical AssociationAstaring eyes, knotted hair and an air of too frequent consumption of alkaloidsAto the Company's sacred Greater Mission Statement, Baker nails her 20th-century targets: societal, religious and oh-so-personal hypocrisy.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Avon/Eos (March 7, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0380731800
  • ISBN-13: 978-0380731800
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.3 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #953,878 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Kage Baker
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Customer Reviews

43 Reviews
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 (8)
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (43 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Solid but not Baker's best, December 22, 2000
By Richard R. Horton (Webster Groves, MO United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Kage Baker has suddenly arrived on the SF scene with several novels and a number of fine short stories. Most of her work so far, including Sky Coyote, is part of a series about the "Company", Dr. Zeus, Incorporated, and its time-travelling immortal servants. This is a pretty good setup for stories. Certainly, as with most time travel books, it doesn't do to look too closely at the paradoxes implied. In addition, the restrictions placed on the Company's technology have a sense of adhocery to them. But I quibble: suspension of disbelief is not too hard, and Baker's work has been interesting and involving. She is one of the most promising new SF writers.

Sky Coyote is told by the Immortal Joseph, a Facilitator for the Company who has been working for them for thousands of years. His new assignment, in 1700 A.D., is to appear to a town full of Chumash Indians in (what will become) California, as a figure from their legends: Sky Coyote. He is to persuade them to pack up their town, lock, stock and canoe, and be transported to the future. You see, their culture is about to be destroyed by the white men -- first Spanish missionaries; eventually the Americans -- and the Company wishes to preserve as much of this culture as possible for restoration or at least study in the 24th century. (Why and how they make a profit doing so is not ever convincingly explained, but let that pass.)

This makes for an enjoyable story. There is a lot of interesting detail about the impressively advanced Chumash culture, including their commercial nature, and their stories and legends. Joseph as Sky Coyote gets to make a lot of jokes, and have a lot of fun. There isn't quite enough conflict, and the plot isn't twisty enough, but the basic story is still worth reading.

However, Baker intersperses this with some other details. Events in Joseph's past life, some of which raise doubts in him about the Company. A lot of focus on an otherwise thoroughly minor character named Mendoza (who is the protagonist of some other books in the series). A few strange intimations of something portentous occurring in 2355 A.D. All this is really quite interesting. The problem is, it's really not got much of anything to do with the rest of the novel, and it serves mainly as a distraction. The main story is a bit thin anyway, and the hints of some really interesting stuff that we'll get to eventually (but not in this book!) don't help.

Make no mistake about it: Baker has the chops of a fine writer. Her characters are well drawn, her prose is sound, her stories hold the reader's interest. And whatever misgivings I have, I still enjoyed Sky Coyote. But I think it's somewhat flawed structurally by the intrusion of an external story arc that is presented only by hints. In the final analysis, this novel will mainly be of interest to readers committed to the entire series, and even those readers will probably find themselves chomping at the bit for the main event to come along.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Better than Garden, May 27, 2004
See, I don't get it. Everyone says that Sky Coyote is their least favourite of Baker's books. Why? Is it because Joseph is the narrator? Is it because it doesn't deal with European-based history? Is it because somehow Baker wrote less beautifully than she usually does? I don't know. I thought it much better than Garden of Iden.

In Sky Coyote, Joseph and Mendoza are sent to California to retrieve an entire tribe of people before white men can get at them with land grabs and smallpox. Baker knows California well: she lives there, so everything in the book has that touch of authenticity. Although she can't give the Chumash language that same kind of twist she gave Elizabethan English, she doesn't fall into the trap that most authors do with American Indians: namely, overly-simplify the language they speak. Of the three factions in the book (future mortals, immortals, and the Chumash), the Chumash come out most human, and that is a feat in itself when the book is narrated by an immortal. And speaking of immortals, I like Joseph so much better than Mendoza! She's stubborn, straightforward, and believes in one thing and one thing only. Fairly one-dimensional, even after having read Garden. Joseph ponders things, has faults and fears, and is much older and remembers far back to the Stone Age of Europe, whence he came. Yet he's able to work despite his fears. Admittedly, he largely ignores them. But isn't that what we do most of the time?

I suppose what I liked best about the book, though, is the fact that it deals with the fallibility of Dr. Zeus and pokes fun at modern society in a way Garden did not. Introduced is the fact that Dr. Zeus has only provided the immortals with historical information up until a certain year in the future, where supposedly paradise on earth will have been achieved and the immortals can rest from their labours. Also added are the concept of the Enforcers, immortals who were recruited to kill raging hoardes during the Stone Age, but then lost their necessity and slowly vanished somehow. The idea is that Dr. Zeus can make mistakes. I loved it. Here is a company that saves you from certain death in the past and makes you immortal. You're trained to believe it's a wise and benevolent power. What happens when you begin to doubt? It's great stuff. Better than that are the future mortals who come to the past to oversee the Chumash tribe's excavation. They are like stretched-thin overly-exaggerated people of today. They play video games all of the time. Their vocabulary is extremely limited. They frown on controlled substances, are afraid of the Chumash "savages", and don't want to harm anything, even grass. They are each super-specialists, a genius in his own field but a doddering idiot about anything else. They have no sense of the history they are trying to preserve. It's just vindicating for a historian to see, as it feels that way today. Few now care about what happened before-- they are willfully ignorant, perpetuating the same mistakes and thinking they are original. Oh, I liked that.

There is, of course, Baker's perpetual theme of single crazy zealots perpetuating murders for a jealous God. She has the Chumash encounter a new monotheistic cult which is, of course, villainous, persuasive, and stops at nothing to gain converts. Much like in Garden's Spain. Or in any of her books. No redeeming qualities, oh no. To be honest, the only way I can get through these parts is that she isn't altogether blatant about them. The story still functions in the characters' minds, and they are believable. So I can still think that God is trying to say something to Joseph, that there is more than the Company.

Sometimes I wonder what Kage Baker really thinks.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Fun and Profit in Time Travel, September 6, 1999
By Sires (It's a Toss Up Right Now) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
I loved In the Garden of Idun and had just as much fun with this one. Joseph as the wiley coyote trickster god is absolutely perfect. Mendoza doesn't get much of a role, but she's there, as the Company operatives try to rescue a whole village of the Chumash Indians before they are nearly wiped out by European invasion and native religious fanaticism. I loved the Rotarian twist she gave to the Chumash which knocks on the head any idea that these people were not socially sophisticated.

I can hardly wait for the next novel of The Company.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Light New World Story Against a Darkening Company Background
Fans of In the Garden of Iden, Kage Baker's previous novel in the Company series, will not be disappointed by Joseph and Mendoza's next assignment together in the new world. Read more
Published 4 months ago by John M. Ford

4.0 out of 5 stars A Chumash History Lesson
Two main characters from Kage Baker's first novel In the Garden of Iden return in the sequel, Sky Coyote. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Sacramento Book Review

3.0 out of 5 stars Sky Babies
Kage Baker's series of novels about the time-travelling Company are built on a great basic premise. But at least in this installment, the execution of the story doesn't measure up... Read more
Published 13 months ago by doomsdayer520

5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant and Funny
Kage Baker has a unique sense of humor that has caused me to laugh out loud on several occasions. Despite being a book with time travel it makes no absurd claims (aside from the... Read more
Published 15 months ago by David Dziak

5.0 out of 5 stars More enjoyable than the first!
While I enjoyed In the Garden of Iden, Sky Coyote I felt was far superior. Whereas Garden got off to an interesting start and then turned into a very, very slow love story, Sky... Read more
Published 20 months ago by J. Cardone

3.0 out of 5 stars Judging a book by its cover
Looking at the cover art, you would get a much different idea of what the book might be about than if you read the short summary on the back. Read more
Published on June 19, 2007 by ostawookiee

5.0 out of 5 stars Coyote in the sky
This book is more satyrical that it's apparent, and some have misunderstood it. All hepisodes are viewed through Joseph's/Coyote disenchanted eyes, the SPA of the immortals, the... Read more
Published on February 20, 2007 by Ventura Angelo

3.0 out of 5 stars Mixed Bag
Once again Baker draws us into the world of the Company. But this time, Sky Coyote is not told from the point of view of newbie immortal Mendoza, but from the eyes of Facilitator... Read more
Published on December 4, 2006 by themarsman

3.0 out of 5 stars A bit of a sophomore slump, but still worth a read
Kage Baker's novels and stories of the Company are usually a joy to read, and while Sky Coyote is less fun and more slog than any other entry I've read, it still has its strong... Read more
Published on March 5, 2005 by Brendan Moody

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent time-travel California smartass tragicomic SF.
_____________________________________
I thought the Chumash characters were particularly well done, very
*California* -- one of the the Humashup tycoons even has a... Read more
Published on April 24, 2004 by Peter D. Tillman

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