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  <id type="integer">310722</id>
  <isbn>1590171969</isbn>
  <isbn13>9781590171967</isbn13>
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  <title>
    <![CDATA[The Slynx (New York Review Books Classics)]]>
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  <average_rating>3.78</average_rating>
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    <![CDATA[Two hundred years after civilization ended in an event known as the Blast, Benedikt isn't one to complain. He's got a job—transcribing old books and presenting them as the words of the great new leader, Fyodor Kuzmich, Glorybe—and though he doesn't enjoy the privileged status of a Murza, at least he's not a serf or a half-human four-legged Degenerator harnessed to a troika. He has a house, too, with enough mice to cook up a tasty meal, and he's happily free of mutations: no extra fingers, no gills, no cockscombs sprouting from his eyelids. And he's managed—at least so far—to steer clear of the ever-vigilant Saniturions, who track down anyone who manifests the slightest sign of Freethinking, and the legendary screeching Slynx that waits in the wilderness beyond.<br/><br/>Tatyana Tolstaya's <em>The Slynx</em> reimagines dystopian fantasy as a wild, horripilating amusement park ride. Poised between Nabokov's <em>Pale Fire</em> and Burgess's <em>A Clockwork Orange</em>, <em>The Slynx</em> is a brilliantly inventive and shimmeringly ambiguous work of art: an account of a degraded world that is full of echoes of the sublime literature of Russia's past; a grinning portrait of human inhumanity; a tribute to art in both its sovereignty and its helplessness; a vision of the past as the future in which the future is now.]]>
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        <name><![CDATA[Tatyana Tolstaya]]></name>
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        <name><![CDATA[Jamey Gambrell]]></name>
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    <average_rating>3.79</average_rating>
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  </authors>  <published>2000</published>
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  <votes>13</votes>
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  <date_added>Thu Feb 12 20:11:28 -0800 2009</date_added>
  <date_updated>Sat Feb 14 23:36:58 -0800 2009</date_updated>
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    <body><![CDATA[i have a long and troubled relationship with the russians. for years i didnt want to read them, because i felt that i wouldnt understand them with their troubled political history, their interchangeable names, their fucking ability to endure that is so intimidating and making-me-small-feeling. and t...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/46200888">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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