A Short, Sharp Shock
Author | Kim Stanley Robinson |
---|---|
Cover artist | Arnie Fenner |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Fantasy novel |
Publisher | Mark V. Ziesing |
Publication date | 1990 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
ISBN | 978-0-929-48018-3 |
A Short, Sharp Shock (sometimes titled Short, Sharp Shock) is a 1990 fantasy novel by Kim Stanley Robinson.[1] The story deals with a man who awakens without memory in a strange land and journeys through it to find the woman he woke alongside.
His journey takes him along the narrow strip of land, surrounded by ocean, which makes up the whole world. The content is unlike anything found elsewhere in Robinson's oeuvre, yet the themes remain very similar. The strong link between the human characters and the natural world connects directly to the ecological themes of his other work, especially the Mars Trilogy, but the loose and dreamlike structure is like nothing else he has written. The novel exhibits a circular structure, with the end harking back to the beginning, suggesting the theme of reincarnation that Robinson will later make the main subject of his novel The Years of Rice and Salt.
The phrase "short, sharp shock" is taken from Gilbert and Sullivan's operetta The Mikado.
References
- ↑ Kim Stanley Robinson, A Short, Sharp Shock, Harpers Collins, 1990
External links
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