6th out of 17 books
—
20 voters
Yarn
by
Jon Armstrong (Goodreads Author)
From the neo-feudalistic slubs and cornfields of his youth to his apprenticeship among the saleswarriors of Seattlehama -- the sex-and-shopping capital of the world -- to the rarefied heights of power that Tane now treads, Yarn takes its readers on a roller coaster ride through his life. Vada, the stylish revolutionary and love of Tane's life, draws him back into a world h...more
Paperback, 309 pages
Published
December 1st 2010
by Night Shade Books
(first published November 16th 2010)
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Armstrong spins a dystopian future that's perhaps more focused on fashion than I personally could relate to, but if one goes with his premise, the result is highly believable and more than a little scary.
It's the life story of a tailor, Tane Cedar, who grows up in the "slubs" (Armstrong's writing is overflowing with coined words or new usages, reminding this reader of A Clockwork Orange and other masterworks of wordsmithing) outside of Seattlehama. In his future, the great masses of people toil...more
It's the life story of a tailor, Tane Cedar, who grows up in the "slubs" (Armstrong's writing is overflowing with coined words or new usages, reminding this reader of A Clockwork Orange and other masterworks of wordsmithing) outside of Seattlehama. In his future, the great masses of people toil...more
(Re-posted from http://theturnedbrain.blogspot.com)
Normally when I’m about to review a book I’ll stare at the screen for a moment and reflect on the plot and characters, and what worked for me and what didn’t. Yeah, that’s pretty much impossible with Yarn. Whenever I think about this book my brain gets bombarded with neon colours and techno music. So I guess you could say that the book made a strong impression, but it’s all rather bewildering.
Bewildering is a good word to describe Yarn. Armstron...more
Normally when I’m about to review a book I’ll stare at the screen for a moment and reflect on the plot and characters, and what worked for me and what didn’t. Yeah, that’s pretty much impossible with Yarn. Whenever I think about this book my brain gets bombarded with neon colours and techno music. So I guess you could say that the book made a strong impression, but it’s all rather bewildering.
Bewildering is a good word to describe Yarn. Armstron...more
Somewhere after Akira and before Steamboy, the world of fiction fell in love with the –punk suffix. Cyberpunk, steampunk, magepunk; if it had angsty youth and was in a world of high adventure it was punk. Somewhere along the line, I think authors forgot that “punk” wasn’t just a descriptor of young counterculture enthusiasts, but also a summary of a general plotline, where the protagonist was fighting against the status quo. It might be a dystopian regime, a power superconglomerate or a shadowy...more
I was expecting to give this book a much higher star rating earlier on. Even now I'd say it's more like a 2.5 than a 2, but Goodreads has no respect for my indecisiveness. ;)
Imagine if Neal Stephenson was the kind of author who would use high fashion and its consumption as a metaphor for ... everything. And that he lost the capacity for or interest in idea-heavy exposition. And that he was willing to take a slightly different approach to interpersonal relationships of all kinds. Then you might g...more
Imagine if Neal Stephenson was the kind of author who would use high fashion and its consumption as a metaphor for ... everything. And that he lost the capacity for or interest in idea-heavy exposition. And that he was willing to take a slightly different approach to interpersonal relationships of all kinds. Then you might g...more
Haute couture is already something of a world apart, alien and perhaps not a little dystopic, so it's not a huge stretch to go ahead and create a whole futuristic dystopia for your designers to work and scheme in. (The converse is not necessarily true, and indeed I never got any particular idea exactly how this bizarro future was supposed to have come about.)
The portions of the narrative in the present are all set in italics, which is incredibly annoying to read for stretches of even a couple of...more
The portions of the narrative in the present are all set in italics, which is incredibly annoying to read for stretches of even a couple of...more
http://www.rantingdragon.com/yarn-by-...
Yarn is a standalone prequel to Jon Armstrong’s novel Grey, set in a dystopic future where fashion is literally do or die.
A well-woven tale
Yarn begins with a mission. A former lover—“the girl who got away”—stumbles upon the studio steps of the renowned tailor Tane Cedar. She demands a dangerous deed of him: a custom coat crafted from the illegal and addictive Xi yarn. As Tane embarks on a quest to obtain the now-elusive Xi, a parallel story emerges, disclo...more
Yarn is a standalone prequel to Jon Armstrong’s novel Grey, set in a dystopic future where fashion is literally do or die.
A well-woven tale
Yarn begins with a mission. A former lover—“the girl who got away”—stumbles upon the studio steps of the renowned tailor Tane Cedar. She demands a dangerous deed of him: a custom coat crafted from the illegal and addictive Xi yarn. As Tane embarks on a quest to obtain the now-elusive Xi, a parallel story emerges, disclo...more
I picked up this book on impulse off a display shelf at the local library, figuring it might be nice to step outside my comfort zone now and then. Well this is not the typical sort of book that I would read, and truthfully it took me a while to get into the book. For the entire first half, I was a hair's breath away from putting the book aside. But somehow, slowly, the book managed to win me over. In fact, I'll probably go ahead and pick up the previous book by the same author, "Grey."
I really...more
I really...more
The world in this book reminds me a bit of Blade Runner or Minority Report and maybe a smidge of Clockwork Orange. The world is so potent, so bizarre, that it shapes everything said or done. It is a chaotic, overblown place so foreign that sometimes I felt as if I was reading the 7th or 12th in a series and should understand the references more. It was definitely outside my comfort zone, but still not too difficult to read.
That said, I didn't like the world (just my taste) and I wasn't sure what...more
That said, I didn't like the world (just my taste) and I wasn't sure what...more
Armed with just his yarn pulls, scissors, Mini-Air-Juki handheld sewing machine , and his wits …
Yarn is and isn’t your ordinary cyberpunk story. Yarn is about Tane Cedar a master tailor and the story takes place in the world of fashion. My first thoughts were that this is outside my comfort reading zone but the stunning cover art and the blurb’s talk about fashionpunk, saleswarriors and a love story reeled me in and I am very happy it did.
Like in most good stories it involves a woman. In this ca...more
Yarn is and isn’t your ordinary cyberpunk story. Yarn is about Tane Cedar a master tailor and the story takes place in the world of fashion. My first thoughts were that this is outside my comfort reading zone but the stunning cover art and the blurb’s talk about fashionpunk, saleswarriors and a love story reeled me in and I am very happy it did.
Like in most good stories it involves a woman. In this ca...more
It was going so great and then it came to an abrupt end, with so many interesting possibilities unexplored.
This is what the author calls "Fiberpunk" which is apt, if unusual. All the fabric and knitting related terms are fun if you know them. A future where everything is wrapped up in fashion and the society is only about shopping and fashion, and the majority toil in oblivion to feed the fashion objectives. A typical dystopian setup. A typical dystopian setup, where our protagonist does not tru...more
This is what the author calls "Fiberpunk" which is apt, if unusual. All the fabric and knitting related terms are fun if you know them. A future where everything is wrapped up in fashion and the society is only about shopping and fashion, and the majority toil in oblivion to feed the fashion objectives. A typical dystopian setup. A typical dystopian setup, where our protagonist does not tru...more
Armstrong's first novel set in this dystopian world, Grey, was incredible. I came into this one expecting the same sort of thing. This book is also a confused romp through a dystopian consumer and fashion obsessed world and it's just as strange and interesting as the first. However, this one didn't suck me in as completely as did Grey. There was something about Tane and his situation that made the crucial difference.
I enjoyed this one but not as much as his first.
I enjoyed this one but not as much as his first.
Future Earth which is obsessed with fashion (or is it only the narrator who obsesses over fabric? He sees everything in terms of textiles). Cities made of clots a thousand stories high, exit ramps off of highways which are like lethal amusement park rides, hallucinogenic fabric, foods from gross parts of exotic animals. The story is a flashback to a man's journey from rags to terrorist tailor (the journey to riches is implied) in the fashionable world of Seattlehama. The framing story is about h...more
Queue up the techno music and put on your rave clothes because we are headed to Seattlehama. In Jon Armstrong's Yarn, Seattlehama is the fashion/sex capital of a ultra modern distopia where branding and advertising are king. The story revolves around Tane Cedar, an in demand tailor and his adventures to obtain Xi yarn, a psychedalic opiate to make a garment for a mysterious woman.
From the beginning the action moves quickly and draws you in as the scenes switch between current events and flashba...more
From the beginning the action moves quickly and draws you in as the scenes switch between current events and flashba...more
This was not, ultimately, a book for me.
I say that right off the bat because I want to be clear that even though this will be a largely negative review, I am not saying it is a bad book. There are some flaws, but I am sure that if I were the book's target audience I would have loved it.
I must say next, though, that I am very good at keeping an open mind while reading, so I think my criticisms are fair criticisms of the book, things that objectively could have been done better to make a more well...more
I say that right off the bat because I want to be clear that even though this will be a largely negative review, I am not saying it is a bad book. There are some flaws, but I am sure that if I were the book's target audience I would have loved it.
I must say next, though, that I am very good at keeping an open mind while reading, so I think my criticisms are fair criticisms of the book, things that objectively could have been done better to make a more well...more
http://www.rantingdragon.com/yarn-by-...
Yarn is a standalone prequel to Jon Armstrong’s novel Grey, set in a dystopic future where fashion is literally do or die.
A well-woven tale
Yarn begins with a mission. A former lover—“the girl who got away”—stumbles upon the studio steps of the renowned tailor Tane Cedar. She demands a dangerous deed of him: a custom coat crafted from the illegal and addictive Xi yarn. As Tane embarks on a quest to obtain the now-elusive Xi, a parallel story emerges, disclo...more
Yarn is a standalone prequel to Jon Armstrong’s novel Grey, set in a dystopic future where fashion is literally do or die.
A well-woven tale
Yarn begins with a mission. A former lover—“the girl who got away”—stumbles upon the studio steps of the renowned tailor Tane Cedar. She demands a dangerous deed of him: a custom coat crafted from the illegal and addictive Xi yarn. As Tane embarks on a quest to obtain the now-elusive Xi, a parallel story emerges, disclo...more
Well, it was quite a unique book. I usually don't go in for books where the characters have a special language (like elvish or whatever in Tolkien) but I guess since all the made up vocabulary was yarn and fabric based, I had a fighting chance of understanding it and it didn't bug me as much. :) Although I have to say I would have rated it higher if I didn't feel like the ending sort of derailed the story he was telling throughout the book. But definitely worth a read especially if you're lookin...more
really, really interesting vision of the future-- original and weird without being gimmicky or losing coherence. i also generally like the characters and the writing.
my one complaint is that the flashback format made things seem a little disjointed at times. not in a confusing way, but i think this prevented me from being as engaged in the story as i could have been. and i wanted a more grandiose climax, i think.
four stars for worldbuilding though. awesome.
my one complaint is that the flashback format made things seem a little disjointed at times. not in a confusing way, but i think this prevented me from being as engaged in the story as i could have been. and i wanted a more grandiose climax, i think.
four stars for worldbuilding though. awesome.
An often blackly humorous journey through one man's life where fashion rules. I shall never look at knitting needles the same way again - or sales assistants for that matter! Ironic and satirical with just enough reality to send icy water running down my spine as I contemplate whether Jon's future may one day be non fiction. After all, Aldous Huxley was not so far from the truth as he speculated about what the future might be like...
I was born to love this book: I knit, read cyberpunk and relish descriptive immersive novels. BUT the authors writing felt so ... Young, and not that I don't love YA - I devoured Hunger Games for goodness sakes - but there was a level of shallowness (yes, I know it's a story about fashion sex and consumerism) that kept insulting me every time I tried to make it to the next chapter. Glad some enjoy this book, but so not for me.
Author spent time in Japan immersed in popular culture I would imagine and has a degrree in fasshion, thus a futuristic story moving from present, past, future of a boy raised in the slubs who becomes a taylor to the stars in Seattlehama. He has 24 hours to make an outfit of illegal Xi cloth for a former lover.
How often do you get a story about yarn, culture, and sex?
I'm off to look for other books by this author.
How often do you get a story about yarn, culture, and sex?
I'm off to look for other books by this author.
An absolutely unique and fun read, Armstrong has created the new genre of "fashionpunk." In the high tech future, fashion and sex are everything. In Seattlehama, a massive metropolis perched on the top of Mt. Rainier where buildings are knit instead of built and fashion is a deadly serious business that colors every single aspect of life. He's got another stand-alone book in the same universe, I will be seeking it out.
Extremely clever. Armstrong is inventing a new subgenre "fashionpunk". It's cyberpunk far in the future where the world is run by fashion and your threadcount really does matter. Instead of just being about someone in the fashion industry, this version of Earth has every single thing on the planet tied up (couldn't resist) in yarn in one way or another: entervators that run up huge yarn cables, sex is dubbed "fashioning" etc. Kind of like reading Vurt or Neuromancer for the first time.
So I loved this book. I loved it so much. But then I am one of those readers who totally goes gaga when a write creates their own world syntax and then writes in it.
So sure, the ending is a little predictable, but there are definitely little things I didn't expect and overall, the reverence of texture was enough to keep you going in this one.
So sure, the ending is a little predictable, but there are definitely little things I didn't expect and overall, the reverence of texture was enough to keep you going in this one.
Love the way the book alternates between flashbacks and present circumstances. It really seems a solid way to get across the growth of Tane's character from urchin to famous artisan.
There are a few to many questions about the world it takes place in however, that are never answered. I wish some more history was addressed.
There are a few to many questions about the world it takes place in however, that are never answered. I wish some more history was addressed.
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