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Lit Bug (Foram)
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Jun 11, 2013 12:32AM

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Hi Indraneel. Haven't read Amitav Ghosh's non-fiction work but am a huge fan of his fiction. Do let me know your thoughts about Countdown after you have read it. Adite

I'm currently reading John Grisham's the client. it's a bit gruesome but captivating.


Thanks for the tip. It sounds like an amazing read.


Thanks for the tips...hmmm...maybe they should provide a glossary for those uninitiated in cyberpunk? Just saying... btw, is steampunk different from cyberpunk?

Cyberpunk, on the other hand, is mostly about the future and has an elaborate storyline focussing mostly on hacking and cyberspace and matrix. The action is mostly carried out in the matrix and there a few indicators that qualify a work as cyberpunk - e.g. it usually has a loner individual battling against a mega-corporation, the persistent theme of the mind v/s body, the focus on the plot rather than on characters - these are broad characteristics which define a work as cyberpunk. If you look it up on wiki, you will get a very good summary, and it will help if you familiarize yourself with its peculiarities and context before jumping in the book - because without the background, it will be difficult to enjoy the book - the genre isn't enjoyed by all.
I always wondered about cyberpunk and steampunk, but was too lazy to do a google search. thanks for the info

In steampunk, the world is Victorian, but that is still familiar - the only imaginative part is infusing SF in an archaic setting, which is why most people who are put-off by the hard SF of cyberpunk still love steampunk because it is familiar and easily accessible to our sensibilities. Cyberpunk, it seems, is more of an acquired taste, because you have to learn to appreciate the subtleties of the genre in order to like it.
There is a huge load of soft SF, which fuses SF with literature and the human concern that we look for in literary or even pop-fiction works. Cyberpunk, on the other hand, is hard SF, more concerned with ideas, concepts and imaginary worlds not yet in existence.
Gibson typed out Neuromancer on a typewriter - you didn't even use a PC in the US in the 80s to type out your books - and in that era, he not only predicted, but helped make possible the internet, virtual reality and hacking. Nothing what he wrote in Neuromancer existed when he wrote it, at least not as radically as things were portrayed. Programmers took cues from him and other writers and invented what he had so far only imagined - that is what I find so beautiful about cyberpunk - even if it sounds weird, it is perfectly possible, even if it is not dystopian in real life.

Wow, thanks for that. You, clearly, are a huge fan of the genre! :)

Masterpiece.

I am enjoying it so far.

I am enjoying it so far."
TBRed! Thanks :)
On to Synners by Pat Cadigan


Sounds good. Got it too. :)


Absolutely agree with you. I still have a few years (hopefully) before I croak it! ;)

Have you started reading it?


I have read parts or Varma's book. Also Gurucharan Das writes books in the same vein.

You could check out his India Unbound. He has written several more, but haven't read them. here's a link to his website http://gurcharandas.org/india-unbound
Another very interesting book you may want to read is Land of the Seven Rivers: A brief history of India's geography https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...

What about Vandana Shiva? Do you have already read her books? They seem interesting. I have heard about her some weeks ago during a conference about biological food and fair trade.

reading: to kill a mocking bird
next: to start 'sea of poppies' from leftout

Reading : Empire of the Moghul: The serpent's tooth
About to read: The Shadow Lines

What about Vandana Shiva? Do you have already read her books? They seem interesting. I have heard about her ..."
I admire her work and passion as a relentless environmentalist but haven't read any of her books.


Thanks - sounds interesting!

Mieville's a fantastic world-builder... And maintains suspense so very well...sigh
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