An elegant and far-ranging novel exploring the nature of life, death, and humanity
Josepha is more than three hundred years old, but she doesn’t look a day over twenty-two. When she was fourteen, she wanted to die, but an overdose of pills was not enough to kill her. Soon after that came the Transition—the great breakthrough that offered extended life to all humanity—and so for three centuries, death has been denied her. There are those who flee from immortality to death cults, taking refuge in seppuku—starvation—or ritual duels, but Josepha is about to become the mother of the children who will change humankind.
In this sweeping novel, hailed as “a major intellectual achievement . . . a landmark” by noted science fiction writer and reviewer Algis Budrys, Pamela Sargent explores the vast changes immortality might bring to those compelled by older instincts as they struggle to master the technology that could offer them an escape from humanity’s dark past.
Pamela Sargent has won the Nebula Award, the Locus Award, and has been a finalist for the Hugo Award, the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award, and the Sidewise Award for alternate history. In 2012, she was honored with the Pilgrim Award by the Science Fiction Research Association for lifetime achievement in science fiction scholarship. She is the author of the novels Cloned Lives, The Sudden Star, Watchstar, The Golden Space, The Alien Upstairs, Eye of the Comet, Homesmind, Alien Child, The Shore of Women, Venus of Dreams, Venus of Shadows, Child of Venus, Climb the Wind, and Ruler of the Sky. Her most recent short story collection is Thumbprints, published by Golden Gryphon Press, with an introduction by James Morrow. The Washington Post Book World has called her “one of the genre's best writers.”
In the 1970s, she edited the Women of Wonder series, the first collections of science fiction by women; her other anthologies include Bio-Futures and, with British writer Ian Watson as co-editor, Afterlives. Two anthologies, Women of Wonder, The Classic Years: Science Fiction by Women from the 1940s to the 1970s and Women of Wonder, The Contemporary Years: Science Fiction by Women from the 1970s to the 1990s, were published by Harcourt Brace in 1995; Publishers Weekly called these two books “essential reading for any serious sf fan.” Her most recent anthology is Conqueror Fantastic, out from DAW Books in 2004. Tor Books reissued her 1983 young adult novel Earthseed, selected as a Best Book for Young Adults by the American Library Association, and a sequel, Farseed, in early 2007. A third volume, Seed Seeker, was published in November of 2010 by Tor. Earthseed has been optioned by Paramount Pictures, with Melissa Rosenberg, scriptwriter for all of the Twilight films, writing the script and producing through her Tall Girls Productions.
A collection, Puss in D.C. and Other Stories, is out; her novel Season of the Cats is out in hardcover and will be available in paperback from Wildside Press. The Shore of Women has been optioned for development as a TV series by Super Deluxe Films, part of Turner Broadcasting.
I first got this book as an old used paperback many years ago—and only read one of the long chapters from the middle of the book. It was intriguing but I never felt committed to reading the entire thing. I decided to try again a few months ago and was glad that I did. It was almost hypnotic and slow-moving, much like the unending lives of the characters, yet I became fascinated and drawn in. Quite a lot happens over a period of many centuries and it’s unique because the same characters are still living. I gave it four stars because like someone else mentioned—I felt that the ending was too rushed and left questions unanswered. I mean, come on! I’d “lived” with these characters for about a thousand years and I kind of wanted at least a couple of decent hints as to their whereabouts and status. I say “decent” because there were a couple of hints but still too vague. Other than that I liked it very much.
This book showed up on a discount e-book list a couple of days ago. Since I have enjoyed Pam Sargent's books in the past and didn't remember reading this one, I decided to try it. (Turned out I already owned it). The book is surprisingly undated (copyright 1982). Its theme of the consequences of human immortality is even more relevant today with current research into longevity and cyber-augmentation. It has an episodic structure with the individual episodes spread out over several hundred years. There are echoes of Childhood's End (Clarke) in the genetically modified children and of The Naked Sun (Asimov) in the social isolation of the immortals. Well written, the only disappointment was the ending which I felt was too abrupt and incomplete.
This is the second book by Sargent that I've read and both her characters have this strange sort of distanced affect. Both times they can be explained by the society they are raised in but I'm starting to wonder if that's just. . . how she writes.
In any case, this book was a nice collection of interconnected stories that create a history of the end and beginning of the world. Things do go out with a whisper. It is thoughtful and engaging but not. . . action packed.
Sargent não escreve mal mas o resultado fica muito aquém das expectativas que pretende suscitar. Recorre à ambiguidade para tornar o texto mais interessante e ao suspense para tentar agarrar o leitor, mas só consegue ser confusa e tornar a leitura menos agradável.