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Paperback Mercury Station: A Transit Book

ISBN: 1584350717

ISBN13: 9781584350712

Mercury Station: A Transit

(Book #2 in the System Series)

It's 2150, and Eddie Ryan is a prisoner on Mercury, ruled by the qompURE MERKUR: compelling future-history sci-fi by the author of Venusia.

Published by Semiotext(e) in 2005, Mark von Schlegell's debut novel Venusia was hailed in the sci-fi and literary worlds as a "breathtaking excursion" and "heady kaleidoscopic trip," establishing him as an important practitioner of vanguard science fiction. Mercury Station, the second book in Von Schlegell's System Series, continues the journey into a dystopian literary future. It is 2150. Eddard J. Ryan was born in a laboratory off Luna City, an orphan raised by the Black Rose Army, a radical post-Earth Irish revolutionary movement. But his first bombing went wrong and he's been stuck in a borstal on Mercury for decades. System Space has collapsed and most of human civilization with it, but Eddie Ryan and his fellow prisoners continue to suffer the remote-control domination of the borstal and its condescending central authority, the qompURE MERKUR, programmed to treat them as adolescents. Yet things could be worse. With little human supervision, the qompURE can be fooled. There's food and whiskey, and best of all, the girl of Eddie Ryan's dreams, his long-time friend and comrade Kor McAllister, is in the same prison. When his old boss, rich and eccentric chrononaut Count Reginald Skaw shows up in orbit with an entire interstation cruiser at his disposal, there's even the possibility of escape... back in time. Like Venusia, Mercury Station tells a compelling story, drawn through a labyrinth of future-history sci-fi, medieval hard fantasy, and cascading samplings of high and low culture. The book is a brilliant literary assault against the singularity of self and its imprisonment in Einsteinian spacetime.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

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At the Edge of Time

Mercury Station, by Mark von Schlegell is a memorable and well crafted way station on the journey to the future of science fiction writing. The narrative travels through time and space with volatile and elegant ease. The events, dialogue, descriptions are told through a fanciful and finely wrought prism based on the legacy of J. W. Dunne, an English aeronautical engineer and futuristic thinker. In 1927 Dunne published an essay entitled An Experiment with Time where he posits that time, like a book, exists simultaneously both in its start-finish entirety and in its line-by-line continuity. Thus human knowledge is not confined just to the moment, but can encompass the entire continuum. Just as we can open a book to the beginning, to the end, or to page 253, we can view past, present, future. This is a notion that intrigued such notables as J. B. Priestly and T. S. Eliot, and it pervades the free-floating action of Mercury Station. The difficulty for a reader who is not familiar with this kind of spatio-temporal fluidity can be a recurrent sense of disjuncture. With a writer as elegant and purposeful as Mark von Schlegell, however, I can only believe that part of his purpose is to disorient the reader. Consider the following passage describing a character at a moment of illumination. "The voice spoke out in her head. Quite as if there was another sort of sense, a kind of extra hearing that opened up some entirely different perspective on what was occurring in the current field and she was remembering something occurring elsewhere." Here is a vivid and immediately comprehensible account of the cognitive leap that J. W. Dunne was trying to convey in abstract and theoretical language. A major aspect of von Schlegell's craft is the ease with which he brings abstruse thought to vivid life. A second major aspect of von Schlegell's craft is the lyrical and learned language with which he builds his descriptive passages. One of the time excursions is to the European middle ages on the planet Earth. Consider the following: "She stood inside a crystal stage, upon which great mysteries folded out upon rich ever-changing tableaux. Containing an aether, she perceived. Barons were prating about like multicolored cocks among trains of servile and self-serving chickens. The doggerel of torrid and peculiarly detailed lays told of their wives tupping with squires, of their daughters entertaining old friars while the good father was a'field. Wives boiled skinned weasels in their pots to gain the love of their sons." The long and short of it: Mercury Station is an erudite and daring venture into an arena of language and thought that lies at the outer edge of our present expectations of science fiction and Mark von Schlegell has the vision and virtuosity to bring us to that edge.
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