Amazon.co.uk Review
In the new millennium, Prabhir spends his childhood on the small Indonesian island where his biologist parents are investigating anomalous butterflies:
"The butterfly--a female twenty centimeters across, with black and iridescent-green wings--clearly belonged to some species of swallowtail: the two hind wings were tipped with long , narrow "tails" or "streamers". But there were puzzling quirks ... the pattern of veins in the wings. and the position of the genital openings ... How could this one species of swallowtail been isolated longer than any other butterfly in the world."A childish prank leads to Prabhir's blaming himself for the violent deaths of his parents and he devotes the rest of his life to protecting his young sister; aged 9, he sails with her to safety and later abandons his education to give her a home. Maddie becomes a biologist, and takes an interest in the strange creatures now proliferating in the islands; when she goes on a field trip, Prabhir feels obliged to follow... Greg Egan's recent books and short stories of the near future--Distress and Luminous --have combined their intellectually challenging scientific speculations with a good deal of human drama, and Teranesia continues this trend in his work; Prabhir's irrational guilt and obsessive protectiveness make him a memorable flawed protagonist. In the end, though, the point is the wonders--Egan comes up with some fascinating speculation on mechanisms whereby evolution could suddenly go into overdrive, and has the good sense not to push conclusions too far; the reader's informed imagination continues well beyond the book's end. All this, and some scathing satire on Critical Theory and Cultural Studies too. --Roz Kaveney --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Product Description
As a young boy, Prabir Suresh lives with his parents and sister on an otherwise uninhabited island in a remote part of the Indonesian peninsula. Prabir names it Teranesia, populating it with imaginary creatures even stranger than the evolutionarily puzzling butterflies that his parents are studying. Civil war strikes, orphaning Prabir and his sister. Eighteen years later, rumours of bizarre new species of plants and animals being discovered in the peninsula that was their childhood home draw Prabir's sister back to the island - Prabir cannot bear for her to have gone out alone and he follows, persuading a pharmaceutical researcher to take him along as a guide.
From the Publisher
Critical acclaim for John W. Campbell Award winner Greg Egan
'One of the genre's great ideas men' THE TIMES
'One of the genre's great ideas men' THE TIMES
'Greg Egan is central to contemporary science fiction' INTERZONE
'One of the very best' LOCUS
'Reveals wonders with an artistry to equal his audacity' THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF SCIENCE FICTION
'The Universe may be stranger than we can imagine, but it's going to have a tough time outdoing Egan' NEW SCIENTIST
'Wonderful mind expanding stuff' THE GUARDIAN
'Never one short of startling ideas' STARBURST
'Egan is a major voice in SF' PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
'Egan is a fiendishly clever fellow' SFX
'Science fiction as it should be' ODYSSEY --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
About the Author
SALES POINTS * Cutting edge science fiction from 'one of the genre's great ideas men' TheTimes * Greg Egan leads the current vogue for Southern Hemisphere SF * 'Rewards the reader with ever expanding vistas of wonder' New Scientist Hugo Award-winning author * Greg Egan regularly sited as the key ideas man of contemporary SF