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I picked this Swedish book up because it sounded interesting, but strange, and short -- and I'm generally game for strange science-fiction, especially if it's not too big an investment of time. Within the early pages, the reader meets a young woman who is being sent from some kind of city or settlement to an outlying one, in order to conduct market research on hygiene products. This tundra-covered landscape contains only two other settlements, all connected by an antiquated rail line, and the cl
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Fails to fully explore its central premise and ends up just being a bunch of dystopian tropes. Amatka is built around a fascinating linguistic premise, but it fails to really consider how language and society would have to be changed. Poetry should be a central theme but instead it's little more than a MacGuffin.
1984 both does dystopia society better and has more to say about language with Newspeak. Embassytown is a more engrossing story about linguistic realism. ...more
1984 both does dystopia society better and has more to say about language with Newspeak. Embassytown is a more engrossing story about linguistic realism. ...more

Mar 04, 2018
Pantteri
marked it as to-read


Nov 04, 2020
Jenny
marked it as to-read

