SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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When Gravity Fails
Group Reads Discussions 2012
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"When Gravity Fails" For Those Who Have Finished *spoilers*
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Kim
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Feb 05, 2012 03:03AM

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It's always interesting to go back a few decades and look at how sf writers did with their predictions for the near future. In this case, one of the most striking things to me was the prediction of both the USSR and USA driving each other to extinction through the cold war, fracturing and Balkanizing. He was half right of course, with communist Eastern Europe beginning to distintegrate just two years after this book was published.
Up until the end of the book, I thought Effinger had also failed by seeming to predict a Middle East that was becoming more open, or at least partially tolerant, to secularism and Westerners. In the end, of course we find there are those committing violence in the name of jihad in Effinger's world too.


I'm not going to rush out and read the other books in the series. Perhaps Tech Noir is not my preferred reading (will have to try another author).
I would have liked to have known more about Marid and why he dreaded using the "plug" in his head - the story definitely wrapped up too quickly for me.

Although I managed to predict the "whodunit" before the end, I was kept amused and intrigued by the culture/characters until that point was reached.
I really enjoyed this book, but mainly for the atmosphere and culture that the author built up. The actual detective story was slightly irritating.

It was interesting to read, but I felt like it started to slow down around the middle. The setting was interesting but the story itself didn't grab me that much.



If I analyze my reaction, I probably loved the culture and the style a bit more than the plot, but I really like the whole package. And yes, I can definitively say that I'll read the next book because I started it yesterday. I love my library!

100% in agreement with that. this book was one of the very few times I thoroughly didn't care what was going on, I was so busy enjoying wallowing in this trashy, gritty, foreign slum, hanging out with characters more colorful than the teletubbies. they mystery itself was just a way to structure Audran's meandering through the bad part of town, and by the end, yes, it was slightly irritating. nobody else in his world cared that there were two killers, and I didn't really, either.
this city, though, is amazing. though the Wikipedia tells me that Effinger wrote the Budayeen as a version of the French Quarter that he lived in, it feels wholly non-western to me. most cyberpunk feels like it's set in a future bad part of NYC or LA, this was a deeply investing & unique setting.


I will try to read sequel.
I want to know if Marid can renew his relationship (love) with his girlfriend. :o)


I didn't mind the Hassan scene so much, as how he found the other killer, Khan. Well, he didn't find Khan. Instead Marid walked to another section of town, paid a guy to let him stay at his house for a couple days -- surely he looked around to make sure he wasn't being followed? A few minutes later he exited the house and Khan approached him. That was the letdown for me. I would have liked some more detective work to hunt down the killer.
Did enjoy Marid's sardonic sense of humor, the city of Budayeen, the atmosphere and culture.