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Life (2004)

di Gwyneth A. Jones

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1718159,163 (3.43)11
Anna Senoz is a brilliant young scientist, working towards her PhD and a bright career when she makes a discovery that could change the world of genetics forever. The 'Transferred Y' chromosome, however, isn't as welcomed by her peers, or the wider society. Anna is forced to choose between her dedication to her discovery, the progress of her career, and her responsibilities to her family. Does scientific integrity mean speaking out against the naysayers? Are the potential ramifications of her discovery too wide-reaching for her to risk pursuing it? Winner of the 2004 Philip K. Dick award, Life examines society's fixation on biological sex, the struggles of women in STEM, and the pressures placed upon them by families, colleagues and friends alike. Perfect for fans of alternate histories and near-future feminist SFF, like The Handmaid's Tale and Vox.… (altro)
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» Vedi le 11 citazioni

This book will suck you into it. ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
Tiptree honours list 2004. Monotonous, middle-class soap; hardly enough science fiction in it to be worth the name. What were the Tiptree award people thinking? Got half-way and couldn't be bothered to continue. ( )
  SChant | Aug 6, 2019 |
a very understated account of a brilliant female scientist, whose career difficulties are gender-based. the background setting is a world gradually falling into chaos based on geopolitical issues generated in our present. the research involves DNA changing, rapidly altering male/female characteristics. it's also a realistic account of a marriage from the point of view of both parties and even of the small child they share, of a number of friendships complicated over time in a culture that's very gradually disintegrating, and of the central character's experience of the world around her. her view of and response to the events in her life is also driven by her experience of a rape she never reveals to anyone: instead perennially stepping around it in every situation, always attempting to placate aggressors though she sees clearly their duplicity as they attempt to silence her or arrange to take credit for her work. because she has some form of undiagnosed Asperger's, she also has difficulty meeting people head-on, preferring to prioritize work over socializing, especially because she knows very well she's onto something world-changingly important. but she has an unusual voice and point of view. altogether a very thought-provoking book on many fronts, which could have been marketed as mainstream fiction, but which because of its setting reads very much like Kim Stanley Robinson's way of telling a story, and to him she dedicates the book. ( )
  macha | Apr 6, 2016 |
A tremendously moving book about one woman's scientific career, its stops and starts, the life she builds for herself, and the earthshattering discovery she makes. I loved it. ( )
  jen.e.moore | Apr 5, 2016 |
I was excited by the idea of this book: a near-future woman scientist's discovery of some paradigm-shifting biological sex genetic thingy. And I read the whole thing straight through (have a cold) but what I came away with was that Jones's characterizations are bizarrely homophobic and even misogynist. Certainly Jones is willing to have the one lesbian character in the book be an avowed woman-hater and the one "lesbian" sex scene is as bad as some kind of 80s-era Naiad Press romance: "...they got naked and lay between them, and hugged and kissed and nuzzled and licked and enjoyed each other..." All non-gender-conforming and/or queer people in this novel are characterized as freaks, unstable, immoral, frivolous, or ugly. Seriously? This won the James Tiptree prize? ( )
  anderlawlor | Apr 9, 2013 |
Jones's genius here, however, is in the many layers and textures of experience she gives us, her recognition that great discoveries, great science, great art—like great sorrow and tragedy—take place against the minutiae of our days...This is a novel that strives fully to limn contemporary life, where we began and what we have become.
aggiunto da ltimmel | modificaMagazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, James Sallis (Nov 7, 2009)
 
Remarkably rich and sophisticated...Life [is] a bold but accurate title for a work that anchors itself in the commonest meaning of the term (the old 24/7) and subtly weaves its way toward the larger scientific and philosophical versions that we tend to give capital letters and a lot more respect.
aggiunto da ltimmel | modificaLocus Magazine, Faren Miller (Nov 7, 2009)
 
[...]Like all of Jones’s work, Life demands—and amply repays—close reading. In addition to writing well about the thrills and tedium of scientific research, she manages to be both clinical and lyrical in describing her characters’ exploration of their sensuality.
aggiunto da ltimmel | modificaNew York Times, Gerald Jonas (Nov 14, 2004)
 
Beautifully written and elegantly paced, this story conveys bold speculative concepts through intensely human characters. Deserving a wide crossover readership, it is highly recommended for both sf and general fiction collections. (starred review)
aggiunto da ltimmel | modificaLibrary Journal (Sep 15, 2004)
 

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Anna Senoz is a brilliant young scientist, working towards her PhD and a bright career when she makes a discovery that could change the world of genetics forever. The 'Transferred Y' chromosome, however, isn't as welcomed by her peers, or the wider society. Anna is forced to choose between her dedication to her discovery, the progress of her career, and her responsibilities to her family. Does scientific integrity mean speaking out against the naysayers? Are the potential ramifications of her discovery too wide-reaching for her to risk pursuing it? Winner of the 2004 Philip K. Dick award, Life examines society's fixation on biological sex, the struggles of women in STEM, and the pressures placed upon them by families, colleagues and friends alike. Perfect for fans of alternate histories and near-future feminist SFF, like The Handmaid's Tale and Vox.

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