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Phoenix Cafe

de Gwyneth Jones

Sèrie: Aleutian Trilogy (book 3)

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Following on from White Queen and North Wind, Phoenix Cafe is the concluding volume in Gwyneth Jones' Aleutian sequence. It is now three hundred years since the Aleutians arrived on earth, and the days of their empire are nearly over."
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This is the final book of Jones’s Aleutian trilogy, after White Queen and North Wind (see here), and, as can be seen, just as well-served as those books by Gollancz’s art department. The story is set a century after the events of North Wind, and the Aleutians are preparing to return to the home world. They have the Buonarotti Device, and they’ve fitted it to their worldship. Unfortunately, it seems the Device doesn’t really work for humans – they can certainly travel somewhere else instantaneously, but their time at their destination has all the concreteness of a dream. Fortunately, it works perfectly well on Aleutians. (By the time of Spirit, Jones’s last published novel, and also set in the same universe, the problem seems to have been solved for humans.) The Gender Wars have pretty mcuh split humanity into two antoginstic blocs: Women (Reformers) and Traditionalists (Men). Men believe in traditional gender roles, and keep their women veiled. The Reformist agenda is less clear. The protagonist is Catherine, a “descendant” of Clavel (the Aleutians are serial reincarnators) engineered before birth to be human. Which presents a problem: because the serial reincarnation is partly learned and requires the total immersion in the Aleutian chemical communication medium, and Catherine obviously lacks the biology to read or generate such communication. In North Wind, Clavel was Bella a half-Aleutian/half-human hybrid, but as Catherine, who is fully human, Clavel can finally atone for the rape of Johnny Guglioli in White Queen, which kicked off three hundred years of Aleutian rule, and arguably led to the Gender Wars and the destruction of the environment. Like the other two books in the trilogy, Phoenix Café is a darker novel than I remembered it. There’s a hardness, almost a brutality, to the way the characters treat each other and themselves, and in places it makes the book a difficult read. And yet, there’s a fierce intelligence in the novel too, a sense that there’s far more going on than appears on the page. Gwyneth Jones is my favourite science fiction writer, and I consider her one of the best this country has produced, but it’s good to remind myself of that at times by rereading her books. ( )
  iansales | Oct 5, 2017 |
This is the third book in a trilogy about the arrival on earth of aliens and the effects their economic activities and technology have on humanity over two centuries. It's also about politics and gender identity and exploitation and guilt.

This book follows Catherine, the Aleutian Clavel reborn in a human body, and her relationship with the human Misha and his Reformer friends up through the departure of the aliens from earth.

Catherine, desperate to expiate her guilt about her rape of a human male (and the consequences of that rape, including the Aleutians' acquisition of faster than light travel that the humans invented but can't use), allows Misha to exploit her sexually, not understanding until late in the game what his agenda really is.

I like Gwyneth Jones because she makes me think and I'm always a bit uncomfortable reading her. ( )
1 vota markon | Jan 13, 2011 |
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Following on from White Queen and North Wind, Phoenix Cafe is the concluding volume in Gwyneth Jones' Aleutian sequence. It is now three hundred years since the Aleutians arrived on earth, and the days of their empire are nearly over."

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