Radiance
M**T
Trippy, postmodern sci-fi--gorgeous
So, imagine that at around the time George Melies filmed A Trip to the Moon, we actually discovered space travel. And all the planets--the moon, Venus, Neptune, Mars, etc--were habitable. And unlike A Trip to the Moon, no one lived on these planets but giant callowhales, and these whales produced milk that facilitated our ability to live on these planets, though no one knows what these callowhales are.Okay, then imagine that silent films are considered so artistic that films are produced primarily without sound, and also in black and white.Now put yourself in the Hollywood, film-noir mentality. An Orson Welles movie, perhaps.Meet Severin. She’s the daughter of a famous gothic film director, and has always grown up under the spotlight as a beloved film icon. She becomes a documentarian, traveling the stars and making her own films. Her fifth film—The Radiant Car Thy Sparrows Drew—explores a city that’s disappeared on Venus, and a child that circles the city. She and her crew travel to Venus, begin filming.And then she disappears.Told through scripts, gossip columns, interviews, and a fictional first-person detective, Radiance explores the impact of Severin’s disappearance on those who loved her, as well as the history of a person who’s always been in the limelight. As always, Valente’s writing is mesmerizing and unique, and I’m awed by her ability to capture so many different tones. Radiance is her first science fiction novel (she has several sci-fi short stories, one of which was the jumping off point for this novel), and it combines the pulp aesthetic of 1950s sci-fi with postmodern storytelling strategies.This is a book that’s meant to be read fast. If you let too much time go by between reading, you’ll miss connections. It wasn’t until about halfway through that I realized what was going on with some of the parts, and I went back to reread so I could make sure I was following! But it’s utterly unique and beautiful. For sci-fi, fantasy, and film fans, you should absolutely read this.
K**R
frustrating
Due to all the glowing reviews, I am willing to believe this is a good story, but I just can't get into it. It's just thoroughly confounding. The writing is unneccesarily ambiguous in regards to the timelines and whos who. It really is written as if it was a really long ''what am I" puzzle. I'm all for experimental writing but if after four chapters Inn still without the slightest clue about WTH Ian reading, then that is a problem for me. I keep slogging through, figuring that soon my brain or the book will give me some aha moment but it's just not happening.
L**R
i admired the technique
Some may well like this pastiche about the disappearance of Severin, who seems like a combination of Amelia Earhart and Leni Riefenstahl. In an alt universe that's arrived at our mid-20th century, somehow all the planets have been inhabited and terriformed. Severin, a documentary film maker, takes a documentary crew to Venus. Everyone returns but her. And in a series of recollections, first-person simile-laden noir narratives, and what all, we learn her story.I note the abundance of five-star reviews, but mine is not one of them. Frankly, I threw up my hands when a screenplay breaks out (in a typewriter typeface, yet) and my Kindle told me this would be going on for 43 minutes.No, just no.The late great film critic Pauline Kael once dismissed a film by saying she admired the technique, and then added: "what else is there?"Yes.---Recommended for those who have admired this author's previous books. And those who think Gene Wolfe is a genius. Others should avoid.
U**S
An Author Like None Other
This may not be everyone's cup of tea, but if you can imagine a world where the 1920's silent films, art deco, and noir exist in a quantum physic's, multiverse timeline, well then I think you'll enjoy this very much.It takes a leap of the imagination, but if you can let your mind give way to Valente's worlds, you will be overwhelmed with where she dares to take you. I have been a fan of hers for many years now, beginning with Palimpsest. She is an author like none other.Bravo!
A**S
Definitely not everyone's cup of tea
This one is not going to meet any expectations for narrative structure or content because I don't think I've ever encountered a book exactly like this....but stick with it! If you can even somewhat keep the timelines and characters straight, there's a poetic ending in there for you.**Not for those with a poor sense of imagination.**
K**M
What a beautiful, twisted, mind-f*ck of a thing
Seriously, it's impossible to describe this novel without Launching into a full blown synopsis that would take longer to tell than to read the novel in its entirety. Hitch hikers guide meets goblin market in an alternate universe of jazz age brilliance. Total ho,eric adventure story, little nuggets and gems poetical references, and absolutely stunning in its craft. Disorienting at first due to its non-conventional format, but if you just let yourself flow and not force it into any sort of linear narrative, you'll come away with the literary experience equivalent of a day at the spa--just relaxing with the effect of making everything glow with beauty. God, I love this book.
J**R
Weird in a fun way
This is a weird one: a multi- point of view history of 20th century film making if Jules Verne style space travel had worked. Flits around through time and place, but if you have patience, the story comes together nicely. Very cool.
M**7
Loved it
24 hours after I finished this book, I am still thinking about it. When I first started reading, I was really struggling with it. The style is unusual to say the least, but as the story builds, it really pays off. I didn't think I could love a story about a missing filmmaker in the golden age of Hollywood (if Hollywood was on the moon and all planets in our universe were colonized) as much as I did. It's a beautiful, haunting tale, and I'm happy I pushed through so I was able to experience it.
M**S
There's no place like home
I wanted to like Radiance. I understand the nostalgia for a solar system of princesses on Mars, and lush tropical wonderlands on Venus. The rocky, barren wastes revealed by space probes can represent something of a loss.While Radiance has great qualities, I did find it hard work. The story flits about in style, format and point of view. I could see that the story was about our everyday viewpoint colliding with the vastness that lies beyond. Other-worldly animals and plants had familiar names to cover up their weirdness. I got the point there, which did not make the story any easier to follow.As part of the idea that people take their own viewpoint out into strange places, Radiance has many references to travellers carrying familiar stories with them into space. But although the story of Radiance uses all kinds of easily recognised genres, it somehow lacks a familiar pattern. In an adventure story there is usually some mundane home that people leave behind. Dorothy leaves Kansas for Oz, for example. I mention the Wizard of Oz because there are a number of allusions to Kansas in Radiance. But the people mentioning Kansas don’t seem to know where it is. They certainly don’t know how to get there. Dorothy’s home remains an arty metaphor. Maybe that’s why I felt lost. There was no Kansas. Everywhere seemed to be Oz.At one stage in the book someone says: “Something has to be real. Something real has to anchor the magic.” I would say this is very true, and sums up what Radiance was lacking.Radiance is a brave effort and beautifully written, but I was rather glad to get to the end.
J**E
Marmite - but I love it!
I was curious to know what others thought of this book and was aghast to find mixed reviews. I do feel that's a positive sign for a work of art, for this is what this novel is. Beautiful, Noir, a murder mystery, brain bending pager Turner, set in a alternate future where we can travel the solar system.
P**X
I wanted to love this book
I did not like this book, or did I? To be honest I am not sure. I read this as an eBook and Kindle and I must advise you not to do the same. I had to keep checking the timeline at the front of the book to position the chapter I was reading in context. This would have been much easier with a paper book. The layout of the book itself is somewhat novel (excuse the pun), as we read of scraps of film, interviews, meetings, memoirs and travelogues, with which to try to piece together the disappearance of our lead character Severin.I wanted to love this book. The idea of storytelling in the Golden Age of Science Fiction, where Venus was jungle and Mars a desert plant and Pluto a cold and lonely place enthralled me. There is no question of doubt that Ms Valente can write. Her prose is well written, descriptive and rich language. Yet the first third of the book is not engrossing. Several times I was tempted to call it a day (most unlike me), but I persevered and came to enjoy individual chapters, but did not feel caught up in the book. I loved the environments Valente created with a scientific background which had moved at different speeds with different technologies than our own has. Overall I believe that she has striven to deliver something different and for that must be applauded. As an enjoyable read, however, it has not succeeded for me. Many think differently and for that reason this may be the book for you.
B**Y
Well worth it
I loved the premise of this book -- a space-opera-type mystery set in an alternate reality where silent movies have never given way to talkies, and movie stars hop between our solar system's planets -- but had a tough time getting my bearings in the first couple of chapters. Fortunately I kept going and as the story progressed and all the threads converged I fell completely under its spell. This turned out to be one of those books that I immediately wanted to pick up and re-read, to catch what I missed the first time.
A**Y
Good book bad edition
Great book but bad printing/binding issues which ruined my reading experience. Pages are printed slanted. Sad.
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