| As She Climbed Across the Table | |||||
| Jonathan Lethem | |||||
| Tor Books, 212 pages | |||||
| A review by Glen Engel-Cox
Philip, an archeology professor who specializes in the interdisciplinary
approach, has a personal on-going inter-departmental assignment with Physics
professor, Alice Coombs. Alice's department head, Dr. Soft, has just made an
exciting discovery that threatens Phillip and Alice's relationship by adding a
third party, her new research project. Added to this are a pair of blind
physicists in an unusual pairing, their therapist who pays them to see her, and
the typical academic rivalries and politics. There's also Lack, the discovery,
which proves to be much more than just a physical theory.
As She Climbed Across the Table is quite different from
Lethem's first novel, Gun, With Occasional Music, a wild
mixture of detective noir, post-cyberpunk, and hip 90's wit. The
wit remains, but the genre shifts to a weird combination of
theoretical science and modern relationships. Only one other
author in recent memory has had success with this type of
novel, and that's Rudy Rucker, whose late 70's/early 80's
novels such as The Sex Sphere, White Light, and
Master of Time and Space broke the ground for gonzo physics.
This is not a novel for all tastes, for it is not rigorous
enough in its science, nor sweet enough in its romance,
nor cynical enough in its satire.
For those readers who like new combinations and authors
willing to try rocky ground, however, there's not much else
out there like this strange novel. So do not miss it for
the all-too-likely short period that it will be in bookstores.
Glen Engel-Cox is the creator of FIRST IMPRESSIONS, one of the first and most well-established SF review sites on the Web. | |||||
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