Red Dust (Cuban Science Fiction)
Yoss
Sold by The Maryland Book Bank, Baltimore, MD, U.S.A.
AbeBooks Seller since September 1, 2010
Used - Soft cover
Condition: Used - Good
Ships within U.S.A.
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSold by The Maryland Book Bank, Baltimore, MD, U.S.A.
AbeBooks Seller since September 1, 2010
Condition: Used - Good
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketCorners are slightly bent, Used - Good.
Seller Inventory # 3-L-1-1355
From beloved Cuban science fiction author Yoss comes a bitingly funny space-opera homage to Raymond Chandler, about a positronic robot detective on the hunt for some extra-dangerous extraterrestrial criminals.
On the intergalactic trading station William S. Burroughs, profit is king and aliens are the kingmakers. Earthlings have bowed to their superior power and weaponry, though the aliens―praying-mantis-like Grodos with pheromonal speech and gargantuan Collosaurs with a limited sense of humor―kindly allow them to do business through properly controlled channels.
That’s where our hero comes in, name of Raymond. As part of the android police force, this positronic robot detective navigates both worlds, human and alien, keeping order and evaporating wrongdoers. But nothing in his centuries of experience prepares him for Makrow 34, a fugitive Cetian perp with psi powers. Meaning he can alter the shape of the Gaussian bell curve of statistical probability―making it rain indoors, say, or causing a would-be captor to shoot himself in the face. Raymond will need all his training―and all his careful study of Chandler’s hardbitten cops―to outmaneuver his quarry.
As he did in his brilliantly funny and sharp science-fiction satires A Planet for Rent, Super Extra Grande, and Condomnauts, Yoss makes the familiar strange and the strange familiar in Red Dust, giving us an unforgettable half-human hero and a richly imagined universe where the bad guys are above the laws of physics.
When he isn’t translating, David Frye teaches Latin American culture and society at the University of Michigan. Translations include First New Chronicle and Good Government by Guaman Poma de Ayala (Peru, 1615); The Mangy Parrot by José Joaquín Fernandez de Lizardi (Mexico, 1816), for which he received a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship; Writing Across Cultures: Narrative Transculturation in Latin America by Ángel Rama (Uruguay, 1982); and several Cuban and Spanish novels and poems.
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