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Polluto 3: Sex in the Time of VHS
 
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Polluto 3: Sex in the Time of VHS [Special Edition] [Paperback]

Rhys Hughes , Payne Marshall , Steve Redwood , Dark Michael , John Diviney , Adam Lowe , Testa-Lytle Flavia , Dave Migman

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Product details

  • Paperback: 96 pages
  • Publisher: Dog Horn Publishing; Limited edition edition (31 Aug 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0955063159
  • ISBN-13: 978-0955063152
  • Product Dimensions: 23 x 15.4 x 0.8 cm
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 3,342,994 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

Verrata is the first gem of the issue...this reads like vintage John Shirley c-punk but its intense evocation of the sleazy swampland slum that used to be New Orleans drops the reader into the heart of the story...Jacobs s harsh exploration of identity and free will is one of the longest stories here and deservedly so. It also has a heart. Marshall Payne s Dharma and Bert concerns itself with one of the goddesses who s at home and feeling lonely. The rest of the sisters are elsewhere in the cosmos, and she is starting to feel horny. She is sure she can sense a man somewhere in the heavenly palace, but that would involve a betrayal of the sisterhood, which is showing stress fractures anyway. It s witty and fun in a men are from Mars, women are Venus sort of way. Rhys Hughes s knowingly filthy pastiche of monetary fraud has a character called Peter the Tenant who finds that someone has emptied his lifetime supply of seminal fluid. It s probably just a coincidence that the main character s name is very similar to TTA Press columnist and proofreader Peter Tennant. Of course it is. The Groin Snatcher is another of the highlights here, and, while it may not be Hughes at his best, it s fun. Janett L. Grady s Faux Pas, Doc is the short and effective story of an aging sex-bot in an age of moral repression that doesn t seem too far away from the fundamentalist right wing of present-day America. When the robot runs across his creator, he sees that there may be an opportunity for survival. Or maybe not. The Highway Girl in Robert Lamb s even shorter story has revenge (or entrapment) on her mind, and she unpleasantly turns the tables on the man who attempts to rape her. He then finds that he has to deal with all of the consequences. After a brutal start, the story then moves on to a much more interesting place. Steve Redwood s sober Damaged is a bleak look at the way men view women. When Maria 8 (the name deliberately evoking in the reader an image of the robot from Metropolis) starts to show signs of wear and tear, John Smith thinks of taking her back to the library for a service. This will mean, however, that her memories will be wiped. She will no longer remember their time together. Worse still, she could be returned to the previous user who had treated her shoddily and inflicted damage on her. But she needs a service the silver paint is starting to peel off, revealing the pink layer beneath. What to do? This frank and searching story has an excellent chance of making it into some of the Year s Best anthologies. Michael R. Colangelo s punky Steel Teeth and Synthetics is set in a violent, postapocalyptic city... This issue of Polluto is again a fine-looking magazine and...a pleasure to read. --Jim Steel, The Fix Online

Product Description

Discusses the theme of 'Sex in the Time of VHS'.

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Amazon.com: 3.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

3.0 out of 5 stars An underappreciated series, 2 Aug 2010
By Michele Lee - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Polluto 3: Sex in the Time of VHS (Paperback)
The "Sex in the Time of VHS" issue of the bizarro magazine Polluto begins with the title story, "Sex in the Time of VHS" by Deb Hoag. The tale focuses on Lolita, a snuff film star who is indestructible, save for the ravages of aging. This tale is short, punchy and a theme setter for the issue.

"Clowns" by Kevin Brown is next, a comedy of errors about a clown, his ex-wife and a tragic birthday party, but lacking a soul or a point (a literal non sequitur only a few pages into the issue). Next is "Verrata" by John Horner Jacobs. This is a significantly better SF-angled tale starring a man who has Asperger's and the technology that he uses to try to function. The problem comes when the technology, rather than blocking out sensory information, begins sending errata to his brain. It's an interesting take on a near-dystopian world, and on both the invasiveness of the internet combined with the mental workings of disorders of the autism spectrum with a bonus ghost story.

J. Michael Shell's "Fallout" is next, a most amusing tale of the apocalypse via pollen. Following comes "Dharma and Bert" by Marshall Payne, a too-short tale of a siren sex goddess, bored with everything, and a mechanical man. A good premise it ends unsatisfactory (implications intended) with its own feel of a lack of progression.

"Hundred Year Old Murders" by Garrett Cook again broaches the topic of snuff films and a lead who appears to not be able to die. For variety this one has less character and Jack the Ripper. Rhys Hughes' "The Groin Scratcher" is explicit and crude, filled with bad puns and a self-important narrator that gets quite annoying. There is an interesting point, near the end, but one has to put up with a lot to get there (which nearly mirrors the point of the story).

"Faux Pas, Doc" by Janett L. Grady is another short tale, but fleshy enough. It covers a conversation between a self-aware (and malfunctioning) sex robot and her creator and the way time changes things. It's one of the better tales of the issue. "Highway Girl" by Robert Lamb, another very short story, is a twist on the old horror trope of a rapist falling victim to his victim. It is gruesome, and yet whimsical at the same time.

Following is a collection of equally gruesome and strange art and "The Last Taboo" a non fiction piece by Micci Oaten (that might enlighten readers to some of the not-made up bizarro ideas out there.) Also, there's a collection of odd poems, one of which is shorter than this sentence, which makes reviewing them quite difficult. Pointed, at times pretty, and at other times inane they're a vivid smattering of language and pop culture and a teaspoon or two of rage.

"Damaged" by Steve Redwood takes this issue back to short stories. This one concerns a library where women can be checked out (and a world setting where unemployment benefits covers such needs). This darkly ironic take on the male side of relationships is worth skipping ahead for. "Steel Teeth and Synthetics" by Michael R. Colangelo is another good tale, about humans as commodities, in part because the poor have no value and the rich augment themselves with all kinds of valuable technology. The theme of savagery and value continues and makes for a good, if not very dark, read.

Frank Burton's "The Day She Melted" is another very short pieces, a poem in the form of a paragraph. "Live Without a Net: Bloodletting the Robot" by RC Edrington follows with some startling good lines about both crazy people and junkies enmeshed in more of a rant than a story.

Last is RC Edrington's poem "After Hollywood" capturing the lost feel many artists face. A soulful piece it's a good closer to a vivid, if not too brief, edition of Polluto.
 Go to Amazon U.S. to see the review  3.0 out of 5 stars 
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