Bellwether
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Narrado por:
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Kate Reading
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De:
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Connie Willis
Audie Award, Science Fiction and Fantasy, 2010
Pop culture, chaos theory, and matters of the heart collide in this unique novella from the Hugo and Nebula Award - winning author of Doomsday Book.
Sandra Foster studies fads and their meanings for the HiTek corporation. Bennett O'Reilly works with monkey group behavior and chaos theory for the same company. When the two are thrust together due to a misdelivered package and a run of seemingly bad luck, they find a joint project in a flock of sheep. But a series of setbacks and disappointments arise before they are able to find answers to their questions - with the unintended help of the errant, forgetful, and careless office assistant Flip.
©1996 Connie Willis (P)2009 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Los oyentes también disfrutaron:
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"Willis's story builds slowly but is realistic and engrossing." ( Midwest Book Review)
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Some Hi-Tek employees' names are allegories -- one incompetent assistant is named "Desiderata" and another "Flip" (for the frequent flip of her hair, or, as we learn later, maybe something else). The clueless laboratory director -- who falls for every new management fad that comes along -- is simply named "Management."
Chapters begin with just a little background on the research topic at hand, and these entries make the book's science content accessible to a general audience. I gave it four stars because I thought that these introductory segments were at times a little too long or detailed. But all in all a good book, and I couldn't put it down -- had to listen to it in one sitting.
Pattern Recognition" Meets "Office Space
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Complicating Sandra's research is Hi-Tek management's constant interference with its scientists, forcing on them lengthy and opaque funding forms, absurd interpersonal relationship building activities, new acronyms and dress codes, and so on. Still more chaotic is the unconscious sabotage of the Hi-Tek mail clerk from hell, "Flip." Ignorant, self-centered, rude, lazy, and obnoxious, Flip is an anti-guardian angel who, like a warped avatar of Robert Browning's Pippa, spreads gloom, destruction, and chaos wherever she goes. Flip is a creature of fads, dying her hair blue, branding her forehead with the lower case letter "i," wearing an outfit that looks like but is not a waitress uniform, and so on. Thanks to Flip delivering the wrong package, Sandra meets Bennett O'Reilly, who, despite being a chaos theorist studying the transmission of information among monkeys because chaos theory is no longer trendy, is immune to fads. And chaos theory soon becomes part of Sandra's research: “Fads are a facet of the chaotic system of society.”
Willis' novel is fun, full of talk of fads, scientific breakthroughs, chaos patterns, human foibles, and contemporary American culture. She has an amused and accurate ear and eye for how adults and kids talk and live and for how scientists work and think. Sandra's frustration with Flip is comical: "This is just what I needed, to discuss the sex life of a person with a pierced nose and duct tape underwear."
Three flaws mar the novel for me. First, it pushes an anti-anti-smoking agenda, as Sandra says that people who try to ban smoking from public places are bigots following an "aversion trend" which is going to die out sooner than McCarthyism did. To equate smoking with eating chocolate cheesecake and reading books, to make light of the dangers of secondhand smoke, and to imply that anti-smokers are cruel, morally righteous fad-followers all feels off. Second, Willis makes it too easy for us to guess too soon the true roles of Flip (and the assistant she hires) and the true feelings of Bennett, so that it is not believable that Sandra (who is quite intelligent) would not have caught on by the time we do. Third, as a result I began feeling impatient waiting for the climax of what is a short novel, and, indeed, I bet the novel could have been a novella but Willis probably wanted to elongate it to work in all her cool fad and scientific breakthrough nuggets.
The reader, Kate Reading, does a fine job with all the voices; she's especially good at talking like rude, bored, impatient, and ignorant waitpersons and store workers. And her efficient, weathered Shirl is savory.
Of what genre is Bellwether? Although Willis has won numerous Hugos and Nebulas, this book is more fiction about science than science fiction. Perhaps it is a romantic comedy of research scientist manners. If you like Willis' humor in To Say Nothing of the Dog and or if you are curious about fads and scientific breakthroughs treated in a light comic light, you would like this book, but I prefer her more substantial and moving Domesday Book.
A Research Scientist Comedy of Manners
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Fun facts with a charming romance
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Great fun & makes you think
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What a fun, smart book!
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