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The Windup Girl Hardcover – September 1, 2009

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 4,907 ratings

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The Windup Girl
$11.99
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Winner of the Hugo and Nebula awards for best novel, the break-out science fiction debut.

Anderson Lake is AgriGen’s Calorie Man, sent to work undercover as a factory manager in Thailand while combing Bangkok’s street markets in search of foodstuffs thought to be extinct, hoping to reap the bounty of history’s lost calories.

Emiko is the Windup Girl, a strange and beautiful creature. Emiko is not human; she is an engineered being, grown and programmed to satisfy the decadent whims of a Kyoto businessman, but now abandoned to the streets of Bangkok. Regarded as soulless beings by some, devils by others, New People are slaves, soldiers, and toys of the rich in this chilling near future in which calorie companies rule the world, the oil age has passed, and the side effects of bio-engineered plagues run rampant across the globe.

What happens when calories become currency? What happens when bio-terrorism becomes a tool for corporate profits and forces mankind to the cusp of post-human evolution? Bacigalupi delivers one of the most highly-acclaimed science fiction novels of the twenty-first century.

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4.2 out of 5 stars
4,907 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the story engaging and thought-provoking. They describe the book as a compelling read that engages them. Opinions differ on the pacing, world building, and writing quality. Some readers find the characters well-developed and believable, while others feel the characters lack humanity.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

384 customers mention "Story quality"310 positive74 negative

Customers enjoy the story quality. They say it's an interesting and original science fiction novel that goes right into the story without a catch-up. The characters are believable and the plot is never ending. The book is well-crafted with fast-paced action and many characters. Readers praise the author's imagination and ability to put his ideas on paper. Overall, they describe it as a fantastic read and one of the best science fiction novels.

"...What Bacugalupi puts together is a superior story, one of the best science fiction novels that I have read in a long time, one that takes the best..." Read more

"...settings commonly used in science fiction, science fiction's complex relationships with the Other, and the use of science fiction as a means of..." Read more

"...Sci-Fi Elements: Along with the politics, this book has science fiction at its core. I get where the word "biopunk" comes from after having read it...." Read more

"...It's a more realistic and honest approach that acknowledges how all humans are capable of evil and greatness, but rarely are people one or the other..." Read more

161 customers mention "Thought provoking"157 positive4 negative

Customers enjoy the thought-provoking book. They find the world-building interesting and the message eye-opening. The book has a creative concept and cohesive dystopian world. Readers appreciate the different points of view, clever writing, and thoughtful social commentary. Overall, they describe the story as rich, detailed, and consciousness-altering.

"...There's a strong look at morality and ethics when it comes to bioengineering and the eventual fate of the species, and how our role fits within a..." Read more

"...sympathetic- its humanoid, and his culture has a name and motives for its actions...." Read more

"...It's a more realistic and honest approach that acknowledges how all humans are capable of evil and greatness, but rarely are people one or the other..." Read more

"...was a good story, with very developed characters, who seemed believable in their motivations and their individual quests...." Read more

110 customers mention "Readability"110 positive0 negative

Customers find the book engaging and thought-provoking. They describe it as a compelling read with an enjoyable flow and plausible setting. The author's writing style is described as engaging and fluid at times. Overall, readers find the book worth checking out and a real page-turner that drags them through 250 more stunning pages.

"...There are economic elements that make sense, social, biological and political, all of which are not mere exposition in a prologue in the novel, but..." Read more

"...book paints pictures, plays sounds, brews aromas and constructs a world that the reader can see, hear, smell and touch. Each word matters...." Read more

"...The Windup Girl is good from a certain point of view - the plot seems interesting so far, and fairly complex...." Read more

"...The Windup Girl is a good book - and definitely keep me engrossed from start to finish...." Read more

211 customers mention "Pacing"123 positive88 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some find it engaging with a well-developed dystopian future and compelling storyline. The political structure and intrigue seem intriguing, while the post-Contraction world is depicted with eye-opening detail. Others feel the backdrop to the story is somewhat dystopian, with an overbearing gimmick and bleak worldview.

"...There are economic elements that make sense, social, biological and political, all of which are not mere exposition in a prologue in the novel, but..." Read more

"...In this portrayal, there is nothing sympathetic about the Other. No name for their species is given; no attempts are made to develop their culture...." Read more

"...*Strong Intrigue & Palace Politics: I touched on this a little already, but the backroom deals, coup attempts, power plays, hidden weapons caches,..." Read more

"..."The Windup Girl" is a thinking person's novel set in a richly imagined dystopian future...." Read more

189 customers mention "Writing quality"121 positive68 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the writing quality. Some find it beautifully written with fantastic prose and rich details, rendering the world almost tangible. Others find it mysterious and difficult to understand, with graphic descriptions that are too detailed for them. The writing is also described as small, repetitive, and procedural.

"...What truly stands out for this book is the rich detail and fantastic prose...." Read more

"...His culture is well-developed, noble, sophisticated, and oppressed. We are the "aliens" in this story- rude, ignorant, and oppressive...." Read more

"...other references that I had no clue about, making it very difficult to follow the story, since much of the tensions were based on the history of the..." Read more

"...Worldbuilding: Bacigalupi's glimpse into the 23rd century is so fleshed-out that it's almost tangible...." Read more

150 customers mention "Character development"97 positive53 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the character development in the book. Some find the characters believable and human, with real conviction and humanity. Others feel the characters lack depth, are not heroes, and change from chapter to chapter. The title character makes rare appearances, and there is a large cast of characters with unfamiliar names.

"...I have read in a long time, one that takes the best from well thought out characters, plausible economics and science and a complicated story...." Read more

"...still repulsive, this alien representative of the Other is more sympathetic- its humanoid, and his culture has a name and motives for its actions...." Read more

"...At the same time, his approach made parts of the story and characters confusing and hard to catch onto all of the links between characters and past..." Read more

"...*Tight Cast of Central Characters: Bacigalupi avoids the trap of character saturation that so many far-reaching political sci-fi stories fall into...." Read more

42 customers mention "Pace"29 positive13 negative

Customers have different views on the book's pacing. Some find it gripping and well-paced, making it a quick read that immerses them in the world. Others feel the pacing is slow at first, but picks up near the end.

"...this book up and read just about any paragraph and be instantly sucked into the world...." Read more

"This book is incredibly well researched and the amount of time and thought that has obviously gone into the world-building is truly awe-inspiring...." Read more

"...But these big ideas all seem so small and slow at first, and for the first 50-100 pages you find yourself thinking So what?..." Read more

"The Windup Girl is a very well-crafted novel --fast paced, lots of characters roiling in a dystopic environment seeded with corporate intrigue,..." Read more

39 customers mention "Culture"25 positive14 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's culture. Some find it engaging with an unusual setting and unfamiliar cultures, like Thai culture and language. Others feel the book veers into vulgarity, absurdities, and lacks humor. They also mention that the foreign words used for local flavor are useless and the author has little insight into the female psyche.

"...His culture is well-developed, noble, sophisticated, and oppressed. We are the "aliens" in this story- rude, ignorant, and oppressive...." Read more

"...I've already noted the lack of humor, or even humanity in his characters...." Read more

"...And the rich cultural and religious underpinnings of the book are also strong; there's a particularly cool emphasis on ghosts "phii" that haunt..." Read more

"...The dizzying array of religious and cultural symbols along with the biological and technical inventions and the implications of how they got there..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2009
    Paolo Bacigalupi's debut novel The Windup Girl is a frightening, realistic and brilliant look at the near future of the world. Taking place in Thailand at some point in the future, Bacigalupi paints a picture of a world that is caught between several major problems: climate change has affected the lives of many people around the world, and in turn, has brought a rise in global agricultural corporations, and global energy resources have been depleted, forcing major changes in the way people live their lives, and how a world-wide economy functions with different resources. Corporations have run amok with trying to maintain their profit margins, and released a number of plagues upon the world that devastated the planet's ecology upon which we all depend, and because of their actions, remain just a single step ahead of the latest mutation of blister rust and other assorted plagues. Thailand is a country that has thus far weathered the storm - the Royal government has maintained a fierce isolationist policy to keep the country from succumbing. As a result, Thailand has a precious resource that western companies desperately want: a genebank, containing thousands of new strains of crops that could be utilized to combat the ongoing struggle against plagues and hunger world-wide.

    The story follows several discrete storylines and characters, each with their own motivations and demons. Anderson is a `calorie man', a westerner who ostensibly manages a factory that manufactures kink-springs, a renewable power source. Jaidee is a member of the Environmental Ministry, tasked with maintaining a barrier between Thailand and the rest of the world and the dangers that it poses. Emiko is a windup, a genetically engineered woman, designed by the Japanese for servitude and for sex, who has been abandoned in Thailand and fears that she will be mulched (killed and burned for energy). In addition to these main characters, there are a number of other background characters who are just as complex as their counterparts. In a nut-shell, Anderson has come to Thailand on the behalf of a major Agricorporation that is hoping to gain a foothold in the country in order to obtain rights to the country's gene banks. While he is ostensibly looking for ways to combat the plagues, Thailand officials believe that the corporations have far more sinister and selfish motivations for the gene banks. While in the country, he has to walk a narrow line to stay in the country, as the Environmental Ministry intends to keep Thailand free.

    Captain Jaidee is a leading member of the Environmental Ministry, and throughout the book, it is clear that the country is not necessarily unified in its position to remain away from the rest of the world. Limited trade and imports occur through the actions of the Trade Ministry, which is at frightening odds with the Environmental Ministry, to the point where open bloodshed and crimes are committed on both sides to try and force their position upon the rest of the country, which eventually interrupts into violence, which helps to push forward some of the plans that Anderson and others have laid to gain more traction into the country.

    Emiko's titular character is somewhere between the various storylines. As an artificial biological construct, she is a representation of what is wrong with the outside world in the eyes of a secular nation that believes heavily in the value of one's soul and rebirth. To the Thai people, she is a soulless being, one who is against nature, and essentially lumped in with the problems of the world. Thus, Emiko, who is unsuited for Thailand's climate with reduced pores (she overheats easily) and a body structure that makes her stutter while moving, which makes her a literal odd woman out, and thus a target to the Environmental Ministry (also known as White Shirts for their uniform) who see her as a threat to the country's independence.

    Futuristic worlds are a common element in Science Fiction, but it is very rare to have one that is so deeply realized as Bacugalupi's Thailand, one that takes the current state of existence for the country and extrapolates into the future with hypothetical events. The portrait that he paints of the world is very scary indeed, and the constructed world has reacted accordingly though a number of levels. What makes this novel so interesting is just how everything fits together. There are economic elements that make sense, social, biological and political, all of which are not mere exposition in a prologue in the novel, but where they are an active part of the storyline. This, in a way is one of the best examples of show, don't tell, a writing exercise that I remember from creative writing courses. What is even better (or sobering, depending on how you look at it), this world makes sense. I can see major corporations putting profit ahead of common sense, and I can see the world going to hell in much more vivid detail now. Furthermore, Bacugalupi posits the power struggle between various departments of government, each with their own agendas and motives, both at odds with one another, which trails up through to the very end of the book.

    There's a strong look at morality and ethics when it comes to bioengineering and the eventual fate of the species, and how our role fits within a society such as what we see in the future. Emiko, a Windup, is shunned, hated, in reaction to what she was, and what she represented: something highly unnatural. By the same token, there are holes in that sort of feeling, as one character confronts towards the end of the novel. One thing that particularly stuck in my mind was how much of evolution is an unnatural, random occurrence, verses how much of it is conscious decisions that any sort of creature makes that better enhances their chances of survival? In this world, survival is predicated on the work of gene rippers and scientists who remain just a couple of steps against plagues - it is noted that the windups are built for a purpose, and that they are immune to most problems in the world because of their unique design. Like the clashes in the Thailand government, there is a larger struggle at stake, survival, with both sides making valid arguments for their continued existence. In a sense, this story is a look at how the human race might choose to survive, and enter a new stage of development. To me, this is a very profound element to the story.

    When all is said and done, there is one big theme that goes through and through with this book: survival. Each element of the book deals with this very issue, from the ultimate survival of the human race in a hostile world, to the immediate survival of several characters who are neck deep in political and economic conspiracy to the various branches of government who want to see their vision of the future for their country to survive the coming turmoil.

    What truly stands out for this book is the rich detail and fantastic prose. I've purposely taken my time with this book so that I could absorb as much as I could. What Bacugalupi puts together is a superior story, one of the best science fiction novels that I have read in a long time, one that takes the best from well thought out characters, plausible economics and science and a complicated story.

    (Originally posted to my blog)
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2011
    Science fiction, despite decades of history that stretches the definition of the term and splinters it into subgenres, can still be looked at as a more-or-less coherent whole, and certain overarching trends can be seen within it throughout its history. Paolo Bacigalupi's The Windup Girl exemplifies a number of those trends. Three of them will be explored here: the changing settings commonly used in science fiction, science fiction's complex relationships with the Other, and the use of science fiction as a means of exploring present day problems.
    Science fiction has always been used as a means of exploring, and the settings sci-fi stories are placed in have traditionally reflected that intent. Often the goal was to in a sense explore the places that were unfamiliar to humanity at large, or the people or situations that might be found there. Stories therefore tended to be set very far away from the familiar- 20,000 leagues under the sea, on the moon, or on worlds that could only be accessed by a blue box capable of traveling in time and in space. As time has passed, however, that has become increasingly less frequently the accepted setting for science fiction. Stories are more often being placed closer to home, often in Earth's present, near-future, or familiar parts of our past. The aforementioned traveling blue box, from the Doctor Who science fiction series, exemplifies that trend: the older doctors were off-planet far more frequently than the current batch, who are busy warding off yearly alien invasions of London. Windup Girl continues this trend, set in a Thailand which is clearly in Earth's not-so-distant future. This trend suggests that as reading audiences have become more sophisticated, we're finding more and more to explore in places closer to home- the differences can be more subtle and still hold power. That impression is reinforced when we notice that Windup Girl, although set on Earth, is set in a country with which most of its readers have little experience. Differences in culture and climate, although probably subtler than differences between planets, are now enough to capture our imaginations. History also tends to suggest that environments that were once wholly alien, ripe for exploration, are now less so: we've been to the moon, and we've been using telescopes and deep-space probes to thoroughly explore celestial bodies further afield for some time now. To find fresh territory, it seems literature must return to the old.
    Connected to science fiction's response to other cultures is science fiction's response to what might be called the Other, or otherness, where that term refers to living beings different in some respect from ourselves. Human history has struggled to come to terms with the presence of other humans from whom we differ, and that struggle has manifested in conflict of religious, racial, and cultural origins. The mind and being of someone with whom we simply cannot connect, for some reason, is a whole new stage of exploration, and therefore a topic for science fiction. Science fiction's response to the Other has changed a great deal over the years. The initial response is exemplified in "Arena", by Fredric Brown, which features a human and an alien doing battle for the survival of their race. In this portrayal, there is nothing sympathetic about the Other. No name for their species is given; no attempts are made to develop their culture. The alien's body is radically different from ours, round and, in the perception of the human, disgusting. Its mind is similarly repulsive; the human narrator is able to briefly connect with it and finds only raw, inexplicable hatred. For the science fiction this story exemplifies, the human's actions are the right response to the Other: he outwits the monster and kills it, saving his species. A few decades later, Star Trek features exactly the same story with Kirk and an alien. Although in many ways still repulsive, this alien representative of the Other is more sympathetic- its humanoid, and his culture has a name and motives for its actions. Kirk takes the noble approach, sparing his enemy and saving both their cultures. Science-fiction's attitude towards the Other is more moderate. It is tempered still further by the time "43 Anterean Dynasties" was written. In that story, the representative of the Other is also the narrator, and is an intensely sympathetic figure. His culture is well-developed, noble, sophisticated, and oppressed. We are the "aliens" in this story- rude, ignorant, and oppressive. Implicitly, the right response to Otherness in this story would have been to allow the other culture to flourish peaceably beside our own, learning from each other along the way. Since The Windup Girl does not have any aliens, it might be easy to think that it does not deal with Otherness, but this is not truly correct- it approaches the issue of the Other from many different perspectives. Emiko is an Other to everyone else in the book by virtue of being a genetically-modified human; Anderson and Hock Seng are Other to the Taiwanese because they are foreigners. Through them, The Windup Girl furthers science fiction's response to the Other, neither taking the wholly-evil approach of "Arena" nor the wholly-sympathetic response of "43 Anterean Dynasties". Each one of those characters is the narrator at some point it the story, and reasons are given for the reader to sympathize with each of them: Hock Seng has lost everything- family, friends, fortune. Emiko is a lost young woman, abused and taken advantage of, trying to survive. Anderson Lake dies an undeservedly unpleasant death, with only one person to stand by his side. But each is also alien and abhorrent to the reader in various ways. Emiko eventually comes to disregard human life, to the point of sizing up innocents as potential kill targets and, in the end, seeking to replace humanity with genetically superior beings like herself. Hock Seng's attitudes about women and lack of dedication or loyalty to much except keeping himself alive is off-putting. Anderson Lake treats the woman he's involved with (Emiko) quite badly, and is serving a morally questionable company to undermine the national sovereignty of Thailand. In this contrast, The Windup Girl is giving us a truly modern view of those we perceive to be different from ourselves: conflicted feelings of both sympathy and repulsion, and by having a wide variety of characters with that quality, the book illustrates that virtually everyone is conflicted in that fashion- everyone, Other and familiar, has pieces of themselves we can relate to, and pieces we would be repulsed by.
    Arguably, science fiction's tendency to explore relationships between people who can't quite understand each other is just one part of its broader tradition of studying contemporary social issues and society's fears about the future. Star Trek, again, exemplifies this, taking on Cold War themes in the Federation-Klingon relationship, and tackling racial tension issues in episodes like "Let that Be Your Last Battlefield." Books like Do Robots Dream of Electric Sheep? question what it means to be human. That trend in science fiction shows no sign of declining, and The Windup Girl vigorously takes part. Environmental consequences of choices we're making now define the world in which the story takes place. Transportation and human living conditions have been fundamentally altered by global warming. The prevalence of monoculture crops contributed heavily to the famines that shaped the recent past of the story, and the struggle to recover from the loss of many species is the driving force behind Anderson Lake's part of the plot. The Windup Girl also shows the reader one possible set of results of the genetic technologies we're developing now, and questions the meaning of "human" if we continue to go down this path. Emiko is a genetically modified human. The reader cannot deny her humanity. and yet she is denied basic human rights. The question of how we should culturally and legally handle people such as Emiko in the future is thereby implicitly explored. There are also environmental consequences to our genetic tinkering, like the production of super-capable `foreign' species like the cheshires, which can wipe out native populations. Finally, issues of national identity, racism, and race are also explored. Can Thailand truly be a sovereign nation if it is dependant on another country's companies for continued survival? How do foreigners deal with living in a country that has a strong sense of national identity? The reader is brought in close contact with vicious racism and nationalism run wild in the character of Hock Seng, whose family is killed and life's work is destroyed as a result of those passions. The answer to the questions The Windup Girl asks are not clear, in the story or out of it, but the fact that science fiction will continue to ask them is far more certain.
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  • nemo galletti
    5.0 out of 5 stars La fantascienza che vorrei
    Reviewed in Italy on April 17, 2022
    Ho letto l'edizione originale, ed ora riletto la sua traduzione in italiano (che direi discreta, a parte la traduzione del titolo nella quale si perde qualcosa). Definirei perfetto questo romanzo di fantascienza: una realtà distopica perfettamente inserita in un contesto etnico e sociale con elementi che sviluppano alcune distorsioni della realtà odierna. Degenerazione della manipolazione genetica a fini di lucro e potere, problema energetico, corruzione, avidità, compromissione definitiva dell'equilibrio ecologico ed ambientale, la necessità di tecnologia "di retroguardia" con geniali invenzioni che devono sopperire alle carenze energetiche e materiali. L'inserimento in una realtà come quella Thai offre facilmente una ambientazione alla Blade Runner grazie agli elementi sociali spesso conflittuali in essa presenti: spiritualità, corruzione, conflitti politici, differenze di classe, tradizione, modernità, stratificazioni sociali, degenerazione, tolleranza e intolleranza, burocrazia e trasgressione. L'ambiente degenerato che ne deriva è quindi perfettamente innestato e coerente, una realtà distopica che vede un futuro compromesso da conflitti, esaurimento delle risorse energetiche, estinzione di molte forme di vita vegetali causata da batteri e virus manipolati geneticamente ai fini di favorire la vendita di sementi sterili brevettate (e difese), presenza di esseri modificati (tra cui la neo umana "ragazza meccanica") grazie alla manipolazione genetica. Immergersi subito nella realtà ricreata dal romanzo non è facile. Aiuta una buona conoscienza di Bangkok, della lingua e delle usanze Thai, dell'attualità Thai (che si proietta nel futuro con un pattern quasi immutato), delle storie e condanne recenti di aziende come ad esempio la Monsanto. Aiuta sapere che la sede della Pioneer (multinazionale attiva nelle sementi e negli OGM) è a Des Moines (nota: queste due aziende non sono mai citate ma i loro corrispondenti del futuro ne sono l'eredità speculare).
    Al lettore è richiesto quel piccolo sforzo di adattamento e di ricostruzione storica che ha il pregio di rendere la narrazione piu' immersiva e anche -perchè no- di suggerire subito l'abbandono della lettura a chi non è portato al genere, al metodo e allo stile. Chi invece ne resta affascinato arriverà alla fine senza pentirsene.
    Certo concordo con altre recensioni sulla necessità di aggiungere un glossario dei termini Thai utilizzati copiosamente nella narrazione.
    Mi auguro che altri romanzi di questo autore possano essere tradotti in Italiano.
  • Keith Crawford
    5.0 out of 5 stars Problematic in all the best ways
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 30, 2021
    Genetically engineered crops and plagues have wiped out the greater portion of the world’s agriculture, ending the era of great nations and open borders as humanity struggles to survive the latest pestilence. Anderson Lake is a company man trying to discover the secrets of Thailand’s success, one of the few relatively civilised nations remaining. Jaidee is an incorruptible head of the White Shirts, protecting the nation from potentially toxic illegal imports. Hock Seng is a “yellow card”, a once wealthy Chinese refugee from a violent uprising that murdered his family. Their lives will be turned upside-down by of Emiko, a “windup girl”, an android, a sex-slave, and the person who may be about to start a revolution.

    Did that all sound complicated? Well, it is. The world-building in this book is incredible, and the sheer scope of Bacigalupi’s imagination makes up for all sorts of difficulties. For example, all the characters are racist. It makes sense for the story, but it’s hard to like them! Having endowed us with a super-complicated world, the author then reaches for the literary stars by using third person present: “Lake reaches for the glass.” Great for judges of literary prizes, not great for readers trying to understand the fourteenth made up word on the page. Finally, we have the magically wonder girl, whose voyeuristic sexual abuse is excused because it gets her superpowers, and she has her revenge. Nope, never heard that trope before.

    Why am I being so super harsh on a book I gave five stars? Because if any of these things in the early chapters put you off, stick with it. As the story hurtles into the final act you come to care about these characters, murderous gits or not. This book grows from imaginative world building to powerful character stuff – it has things to say, and things that will stay with you. Bacigalupi has taken risks with style, form, format and character, and they pay off.
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    Keith Crawford
    5.0 out of 5 stars Problematic in all the best ways
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 30, 2021
    Genetically engineered crops and plagues have wiped out the greater portion of the world’s agriculture, ending the era of great nations and open borders as humanity struggles to survive the latest pestilence. Anderson Lake is a company man trying to discover the secrets of Thailand’s success, one of the few relatively civilised nations remaining. Jaidee is an incorruptible head of the White Shirts, protecting the nation from potentially toxic illegal imports. Hock Seng is a “yellow card”, a once wealthy Chinese refugee from a violent uprising that murdered his family. Their lives will be turned upside-down by of Emiko, a “windup girl”, an android, a sex-slave, and the person who may be about to start a revolution.

    Did that all sound complicated? Well, it is. The world-building in this book is incredible, and the sheer scope of Bacigalupi’s imagination makes up for all sorts of difficulties. For example, all the characters are racist. It makes sense for the story, but it’s hard to like them! Having endowed us with a super-complicated world, the author then reaches for the literary stars by using third person present: “Lake reaches for the glass.” Great for judges of literary prizes, not great for readers trying to understand the fourteenth made up word on the page. Finally, we have the magically wonder girl, whose voyeuristic sexual abuse is excused because it gets her superpowers, and she has her revenge. Nope, never heard that trope before.

    Why am I being so super harsh on a book I gave five stars? Because if any of these things in the early chapters put you off, stick with it. As the story hurtles into the final act you come to care about these characters, murderous gits or not. This book grows from imaginative world building to powerful character stuff – it has things to say, and things that will stay with you. Bacigalupi has taken risks with style, form, format and character, and they pay off.
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  • colin harris
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great product.
    Reviewed in Australia on August 1, 2024
    Great book, will read again.
  • Gabriel
    5.0 out of 5 stars Ótimo
    Reviewed in Brazil on April 11, 2014
    O livro é bem interessante e retrata um universo elaborado com personagens marcantes. O inicio desenvolve um pouco devagar com um linguajar próprio que parece confuso (especialmente quando descreve as tais "springs", que se entendi corretamente se tratam de molas que armazenam energia como baterias), no entanto valeu a pena persistir até o meio, pois desse ponto em diante a história ganha um ritmo mais acelerado e um final cheio de viradas. Digno de uma continuação.
  • Eric145
    5.0 out of 5 stars wonderful read
    Reviewed in France on June 19, 2013
    This is a trully original book. The characters are fascinating, especially the windup girl with her moral strength and generosity despite adversity. The confrontation of a set of cultural traits (Thai society), with the challenges of a world turned upside down by the greeed of agro-companies is really interesting.