Sunday, 10 November 2013

Glimmering Elizabeth Hand

Glimmering  Elizabeth Hand





Overview:

It’s 1999 and the world is falling apart at the seams. The sky is afire, the oceans are rising—and mankind is to blame. While the spoils of the 20th Century dwindle, Jack Finnegan lives on the fringes in his decaying mansion, struggling to keep his life afloat and his loved ones safe while battling that most modern of diseases—AIDS.

As the New Millennium approaches, Jack’s former lover, a famous photographer reveling in the world's decay, gifts him with a mysterious elixir called Fusax, a medicine rumored to cure the incurable AIDS. But soon, the "side effects" of Fusax become more apparent, and Jack gets mixed up with a bizarre entourage of rock stars, Japanese scientists, corporate executives, AIDS victims, and religious terrorists. While these larger players compete to control mankind's fate in the 21st Century, Jack is forced to choose his own role in the World's End, and how to live with it.

Originally published in 1997, Glimmering is a visionary mix of fantasy and science fiction about a world in which humanity struggles to cope with the ever-approaching "End of the End."

"If Stephen King set out to rewrite The Waste Land as a novel, the result might resemble Glimmering." -- -- The Washington Post

"Superior! An author worth watching, not to mention recommending." -- -- Booklist

"Superior." -- -- The New York Times

"The tropic lushness of Hand's descriptions are only one reward awaiting her reader." -- -- The Cleveland Plain Dealer

"Wild, psychedelic thoughtful thriller...Another dynamite read!" -- -- Des Moines Register

"Ms. Hand is a superior stylist." -- The New York Times Book Review

"Superior! An author worth watching, not to mention recommending." -- Booklist

"The tropic lushness of Hand's descriptions are only one reward awaiting her reader." -- The Cleveland Plain Dealer

"Wild, psychedelic thoughtful thriller...Another dynamite read!" -- Des Moines Register

"Glimmering is her best work yet...there is beauty in the writing and how, amidst all the madness of the possible end of mankind, individuals can still come to care for each other." -- The Courier Gazette (Rockland, ME)

"Superior." -- The New York Times


ENJOYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!




And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

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