1st Floor Show me where

SCIENCE FICTION/Sullivan Michael
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor SCIENCE FICTION/Sullivan Michael Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Published
San Francisco, CA : Tachyon 2014.
Language
English
Main Author
Michael J. Sullivan, 1961- (author)
Edition
General release first edition
Physical Description
viii, 371 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781616961831
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Fantasy author Sullivan (the Riyria Revelations series) takes a stab at science fiction, introducing a man who travels through time in hopes of curing his terminal lung cancer. Intending to go 200 years into the future, Ellis Rogers winds up in the year 4078, where a utopic underground civilization has "no war, no discrimination, no disease, no pollution, no violence, no class warfare." Yet Ellis immediately witnesses a murder, involving him in a scheme that will affect the nature of the entire Hollow World. Well paced and exciting for the first half, the story fluctuates between a crawl and a race in the second half, leaving some questions unanswered. Sullivan's heavy reliance on contemporary references (including Winnie-the-Pooh, Star Wars, and Lost) is distracting, but his old-fashioned utopian allegory will please readers who share his views on same-sex love (he's for it) and fascism (he's against it). (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Dying of cancer and unable to face the emptiness of his marriage after his son's death, engineer Ellis Rogers builds a time machine in his garage. Aiming for 200 years into the future, Ellis instead jumps forward 2,000 years. The first two people he encounters are strangely hairless and genderless, and -Ellis watches in horror as one of them stabs and kills the other. A group comes to investigate, including the counselor Pax, who takes Ellis home with him. Pax tries to help Ellis acclimate to this new world where humanity has created elaborate new habitats below Earth's surface. But Ellis might be the only person who can find out why his arrival co-incided with the first murder in a millennium. VERDICT This short novel from Sullivan -("The Riyria Revelations" series) is an enjoyable look at a post-scarcity society in the future, with a man from our time highlighting the ways we might stay the same, even as the world around us changes. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Excerpt from Hollow World , chapter four *** "Everyone just stay back." "Darwin--has to be." "Anyone see the attack?" "No. I was the one who reported it--who requested help. We didn't see it, though. They were like that when we found them." "And you're part of the same group?" "Gale University--I'm leading a class in ancient history. We were on a field trip." "All right, you can do us a favor and just continue with that. Stay clear of this side of the park, okay?" "Is it really a Darwin?" "We don't know what we're dealing with yet, so please give us room." Ellis opened his eyes and found the blue sky, now decorated with pretty balls of white cotton. The light was different, the sun having moved well to the west so that the trees and farmhouse were casting long shadows. His chest was better. He could breathe again, yet everything else felt sore. "Pax--open eyes here." "Okay, everyone just relax." The person speaking was the closest of those around him, but still about thirty feet away. A dozen people had gathered near the old farmhouse, two standing closer than the rest and all looking identical. Each shared the same soft face with big, dark eyes, short noses, and tan-brown skin as if some Middle Eastern mother had popped out an Irish Catholic-sized brood of identical duodecaplets. They were all dressed oddly, with several not dressed at all. Some just wore hats, or scarves, or coats. One was dressed all in bright yellow. Another had a full ensemble of red and white stripes--right down to shoes, which made Ellis think of Dr. Seuss. None of them had a single strand of hair, and just like the first pair of androgynous manikins, these new visitors also appeared to have been made by Mattel. Ellis wondered if he was having a dream of the Wizard of Oz variety. Everyone looked vaguely like a bald version of the lady doctor who had told him he was going to die. Maybe he had never time traveled at all. Any minute he could wake up surrounded by Warren, Peggy, and the doctor so he could say, " And you were there, and you, and you. " "We should get more help," said one of the two nearest, who wore just a satchel hanging from one shoulder, a frightened look, and a decorative tattoo. Both spoke in the same fashion as the others. "Give me a minute, okay," the closer of the two replied. He, she, or it wore a full set of clothes, at least. Some strange getup pulled from a Sherlock Holmes story consisting of a long black frock coat, silver vest, white trousers, wing shirt, gray tie, and a bowler hat. Maybe Ellis had accidentally crashed a wedding or really had gone back in time. So what if Hoffmann didn't think it was possible. "Pax! Don't go near it. If that's a Darwin, we don't know what it'll do. It's already killed one person." Excerpted from Hollow World by Michael J. Sullivan All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.