Skip to main content
Venusia (Semiotext(e) / Native Agents)

Venusia (Semiotext(e) / Native Agents)

Current price: $22.00
Publication Date: August 5th, 2005
Publisher:
Semiotext(e)
ISBN:
9781584350262
Pages:
248
Usually received by store in 2-5 days.

Description

A novel about life under enlightened totalitarianism in the twenty-third century and the efforts of a mild-mannered junk dealer to change the human condition.

Primitive literacy is redundant. Mere words are expelled. We inaugurate a world of pure presence. The mind, that intrudes itself between ourselves and those memories too terrible to know, must keep us moving beyond the grasp of their claw. To control the flow, it will be necessary that political order be imposed always temporarily. The state shall enjoy direct, creative access to the real. It's the end of the twenty-third century. Earth has violently self-destructed. Venusia, an experimental off-world colony, survives under the enlightened totalitarianism of the Princeps Crittendon regime. Using industrialized narcotics, holographic entertainment, and memory control, Crittendon has turned Venusia into a self-sustaining system of relative historical inertia. But when mild-mannered junk dealer Rogers Collectibles finds a book about early Venusian history, the colony—once fully immersed in the present—begins losing its grip on the real. With his Reality-V girlfriend Martha Dobbs, neuroscop operator Sylvia Yang, his midget friend Niftus Norrington, and a sentient plant, Rogers wages a war to alter the shape of spacetime, and in the process, revisions the whole human (and vegetable) condition.

About the Author

Mark von Schlegell's stories and essays appear regularly in underground newspapers, zines, art books, and amateurist periodicals the world over. Venusia, his first novel, was honor-listed for the 2007 James M. Tiptree Jr. Prize in science fiction.

Praise for Venusia (Semiotext(e) / Native Agents)

A heady, kaleidoscopic trip into a dystopic future as well as a backward look at the necessities ofthe past.—Jackie Cassada, Library Journal—

a mind-bending excursion through the plastic neuroscapes of quantum reality.

Cheryl Morgan, Emerald City—

A psychedelic sampling of high and low literature that reads like the best of the genre.... like a head-on collision between a David Lynch film and a Philip K. Dick novel in the 23rd century.

Mike Errico, Maxim—