Rating: Not rated
Tags: Science Fiction, SF Masterworks, Nebula Award, Lang:en
Summary
In 1967, Samuel R. Delany was young, gay, black and
possibly the hippest person on the planet. He was to write
more perfect books than
Babel-17, but it is perhaps the most delightful,
clever and sensual of his works. Its set pieces - an extended
wander through space-dock bars as poetess and code-breaker
Rydra Wong assembles a crew for desperate adventures; a high
society dinner that turns into mayhem; Rydra's
subversion/seduction of the sinister Butcher, who cannot say,
or think, I, me or mine - are glorious in their arrogant
sense that no-one has ever been this smart before. Rydra is one of those protagonists whom the author loves
because he identifies with her, whom we love because we are
overwhelmed by his infatuation. And the plot? Invaders from another part of human space
are using as code a language which cannot be broken, and
Rydra must save the day. As a meditation on language and
thought, this is as sharp as its decor. Most important,
though, is the complex, polymorphous sexiness of the whole
thing - its sense of surgical chimerahood, life after death,
and clone assassins as just unbearably hot and really really
cool. 1967 Nebula Award
SF Masterworks #6