Amazon.com If you like challenging science fiction, then Jeff Noon is the author for you. Vurt, winner of the 1994 Arthur C. Clarke award, is a cyberpunk novel with a difference, a rollicking, dark, yet humorous examination of a future in which the boundaries between reality and virtual reality are as tenuous as the brush of a feather. But no review can do Noon's writing justice: it's a phantasmagoric combination of the more imaginative science fiction masters, such as Phillip K. Dick, genres such as cyberpunk and pulp fiction, and drug culture. If this tickles your fancy, you should definitely consider the sequel to Vurt, Pollen, or Noon's lighter and more accessible Automated Alice, a modern recasting of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. From Publishers Weekly Noon's highly stylized, virtual-reality inspired first novel has won raves and the Arthur C. Clarke Award in Britain, eliciting comparisons to William Gibson, Anthony Burgess and Lewis Carroll, among others. But though it is original, vivid and powerful, it's not as revolutionary as the fanfare suggests. Noon gives us a future (or perhaps just other) Manchester, England, where nearly everyone is hooked on "Vurts"-hallucinogenic designer drugs, administered with feathers, that send users into virtual worlds. Vurt isn't any old future drug, though; these worlds have a reality of their own. Users can meet up in them and share the experience, and they can even "exchange" objects or people and bring Vurt items back to the "real" world. Scribble, a member of a small gang of "young hip malcontents," the Stash Riders, has lost his beloved sister, Desdemona (don't ask how beloved if you're shy about incest), to a black-market Vurt, getting in return a shapeless alien he dubs "The Thing-from-Outer Space." Determined to find another copy of the "English Voodoo" Vurt in order to return and trade the Thing back for his sister, Scribble and his pals score illegal Vurts, run from the cops, fight among themselves, trip out on feathers, kill a cop, go to ground, become estranged and regroup. Some die, and all suffer, before Scribble gets his chance. Noon keeps a brisk pace, with the many Vurt-trip sequences, awash in Alice in Wonderland-like images, never so long or involved as to bog the story down. His bizarre, psychedelic future feels like no other, and the startling alloy of pseudoheroic genrespeak and neo-Beat freewheeling rhythms proves a unique and perfect medium for such a hallucinatory tale. There's little of Gibson or Burgess here, though. The story has neither the shock value of A Clockwork Orange nor the cyberpunk nihilism of Neuromancer. Noon takes his material (though not his characters) less seriously than Burgess, Gibson and most other SF writers. His future world isn't meant to be believable, or even cautionary, but merely colorful and engaging (which it is)-and that takes some of the bite out of the book. Nevertheless, this is an audacious fantasia, exhibiting a narrative daring and command few new writers can boast, sweeping the reader along as though it were a Vurt feather-trip itself. 75,000 first printing; major ad/promo; author tour. Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. See all Editorial Reviews
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这本书读起来就像是进行了一场漫长的、低保真的梦境漫游。我发现自己经常需要在读完一页后,停下来,用力眨眼,努力将书中的景象与我所处的现实世界剥离开来。作者构建了一个关于身份和界限消融的主题,但处理得非常晦涩。你很难确定哪个角色是真实的,哪个又是某种投射或幻想的产物。这种不确定性在持续推进情节的同时,也在不断地侵蚀读者的安全感。我个人认为,这本书非常适合那些对后现代主义文学有一定了解的读者,否则很容易在初期就被那些反叙事的手法劝退。我尝试着去记录关键情节,但很快就放弃了,因为关键似乎并不在于“发生了什么”,而在于“这些发生是如何扭曲了感知”的。这需要一种完全不同的阅读策略,需要放松对控制的渴望,顺流而下。
评分我很少读到如此具有侵略性的文学作品。它不只是讲述故事,它似乎在试图重塑读者的思维结构。书中的语言充满了拉丁词汇和一些生僻的术语,这使得阅读过程本身就成了一种智力上的挑战,生怕错过了一个关键的词根解释就会导致整个段落的意义崩塌。作者似乎对符号学有着深刻的理解,并且毫不吝啬地将他所有的知识都倾倒在了纸面上。我特别着迷于那些关于城市规划和非欧几何的隐晦讨论,它们被巧妙地编织进了角色的日常对话中,使其充满了反乌托邦的韵味。虽然整体氛围是压抑且复杂的,但其中偶尔闪现的、关于自由和反抗的微小火花,却显得异常珍贵和有力,如同在黑暗的深渊中找到了一块会发光的矿石。这是一本需要配上大量笔记和参考资料才能“读完”的作品,但其带来的思想冲击是无与伦比的。
评分我必须承认,这本书的书页闻起来有一种奇特的味道,像是旧书店里混合着潮湿和某种化学试剂的气息,这或许也暗示了内容本身的非传统性。文字的密度非常高,几乎没有一句废话,每一个词语都像是经过精心打磨和定位的,带着强烈的目的性。我尤其欣赏作者对感官细节的捕捉,比如某种特定的光线如何穿过窗户,或者某种材质在特定情绪下的触感,这些细节的堆叠,构建了一个令人窒息的、高度风格化的世界观。然而,这种极致的风格化也带来了一个问题:情感的疏离感。角色们似乎总是隔着一层厚厚的玻璃在表演,他们的痛苦和狂喜都显得遥远而超脱,这使得我很难完全沉浸在他们的命运中。它更像是一部冷峻的哲学探讨,披着小说的外衣,而不是一个关于人与人之间情感纠葛的故事。
评分这本小说简直是精神上的过山车,读完之后感觉整个人都被掏空了,但又有一种奇异的满足感。故事的叙事方式极其破碎,像是无数个闪回和幻觉交织在一起,让你完全抓不住重点,却又被一种莫名的张力牵引着往下读。我特别喜欢作者处理时间线的方式,它不是线性的,而是像一个不断自我缠绕的螺旋,每一次回到过去的场景,都会带来新的理解和更深的困惑。主角的内心挣扎被描绘得淋漓尽致,他的每一次选择都充满了道德上的灰色地带,让人忍不住去思考“如果是我,我会怎么做?”这种互动感是很强的,尽管情节本身晦涩难懂。书中的意象运用非常大胆和超现实,有些场景的画面感极强,仿佛直接投射到了我的脑海里,那种感官上的冲击力是许多平铺直叙的小说无法比拟的。唯一美中不足的是,对于一些习惯了清晰逻辑的读者来说,可能需要反复阅读才能勉强跟上作者的思路,但正是这种挑战性,让这本书的价值显得更加突出。它更像是一件需要被“体验”而非仅仅是“阅读”的艺术品。
评分老实说,这本书的阅读体验是令人沮丧的,但这种“沮丧”却带着一种令人上瘾的魔力。我花了大量的时间去解读那些看似毫无关联的段落,它们更像是诗歌碎片,而不是传统意义上的小说章节。作者似乎完全蔑视了传统小说的结构规范,角色们的动机常常是模糊不清的,他们的对话充满了双关和隐喻,每一次试图去理解“他们到底想说什么”都像是在解一个没有标准答案的谜语。我读到后面甚至开始怀疑自己对现实的认知是否也受到了书中那种迷离氛围的影响。这本书的强大之处在于,它成功地创造了一种环境,让读者主动参与到意义的构建过程中。如果你期待一个明确的结局或者一个清晰的英雄旅程,那你一定会失望。但如果你渴望那种被文字的迷雾包裹、在混乱中寻找微弱光点的刺激感,那么这本书绝对值得一试。它强迫你走出舒适区,去直面文学创作中那些最不驯服的可能性。
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