Creative surgery

Clelia Farris, 1967-

Book - 2020

"In Clelia Farris' mind-bending tales, you'll find captivating characters with elusive identities like Kieser, who longs to transform himself through horrific procedures in "Creative Surgery," or Yuliano ("Secret Enemy"), a man with no aesthetic taste, or Gabola, engaged in the battle of a lifetime against the expropriation of the Little Tuvu Hill. With dry and polished prose, like the stones of her native Sardinia, Clelia Farris takes us on adventures among the ruins of a future marred by climate change ("A Day to Remember") and in a haunting prison inhabited by the enigmatic figure of "Rebecca." Collected and translated into English for the first time, these seven stories represent so...me of the greatest works from one of Italy's best science fiction authors."--Amazon.

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Short stories
Published
Greenbelt, Maryland : Rosarium Publishing ©2020.
Language
English
Italian
Main Author
Clelia Farris, 1967- (author)
Other Authors
Rachel S. Cordasco (translator), Jennifer Delare
Item Description
Translated from the Italian.
Physical Description
167 pages : 20 cm
ISBN
9781732638839
  • A day to remember
  • Gabola
  • Holes
  • Secret enemy
  • Rebecca
  • The substance of ideas
  • Creative surgery.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This transcendent and deeply unsettling collection introduces English-language readers to Italian science fiction heavyweight Farris. "Gabola" and "The Substance of Ideas" anchor the collection with bittersweet meditations on history and devotion, and are the closest Farris gets to comfort reading. Though some stories, like "A Day to Remember," suffer from underexplanation, readers who take the time to read between the lines will be richly rewarded. And the title story is a gruesome standout, chronicling the friendship between two misfit surgeons as they construct ever more elaborate chimera--and ends in a twist that demands the story be read again, and again. Across all seven marvelous tales, Farris effortlessly melds near-future settings, a fabulist tone, and magical, bizarre details: including sea urchins that can confer skills like knitting or poker playing; a university full of feral, borderline cannibalistic biologists; and a computer capable of editing human memory contained inside a marble. Farris has the gift of making her wildly imaginative worlds feel fully lived-in. Readers of literary science fiction will devour this collection. (Sept.)

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