Download Ebook Fires of Eden, by Dan Simmons
You could conserve the soft file of this e-book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons It will rely on your downtime as well as tasks to open up and read this book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons soft documents. So, you may not be scared to bring this book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons all over you go. Merely include this sot file to your device or computer system disk to permit you read each time as well as everywhere you have time.
Fires of Eden, by Dan Simmons
Download Ebook Fires of Eden, by Dan Simmons
Just how if there is a website that enables you to search for referred publication Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons from all over the globe author? Instantly, the website will certainly be incredible finished. Many book collections can be found. All will certainly be so simple without complex thing to move from website to website to obtain the book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons desired. This is the website that will provide you those expectations. By following this website you could obtain great deals numbers of book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons compilations from versions kinds of writer and also publisher preferred in this globe. The book such as Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons as well as others can be acquired by clicking wonderful on link download.
As recognized, book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons is well known as the window to open up the globe, the life, and brand-new point. This is what the people currently need so much. Even there are lots of people which don't like reading; it can be an option as reference. When you truly need the methods to create the following inspirations, book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons will actually lead you to the way. In addition this Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons, you will certainly have no remorse to get it.
To get this book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons, you may not be so baffled. This is on the internet book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons that can be taken its soft data. It is different with the on-line book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons where you could order a book and afterwards the vendor will certainly send out the published book for you. This is the place where you could get this Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons by online and also after having take care of acquiring, you can download Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons on your own.
So, when you need quickly that book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons, it does not need to wait for some days to receive guide Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons You can directly obtain guide to conserve in your tool. Even you love reading this Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons anywhere you have time, you could appreciate it to read Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons It is certainly handy for you which intend to obtain the more priceless time for reading. Why do not you spend 5 mins and also invest little cash to get the book Fires Of Eden, By Dan Simmons right here? Never ever let the extra thing quits you.
A real-estate mogul's attempts to build a deluxe Hawaiian resort are undermined by the disappearance of guests, discovery of strange beasts capable of human speech, and volcanic eruptions, as vengeful gods bring their immortal rivalries into the modern world.
- Sales Rank: #202981 in Books
- Published on: 1994-10-27
- Released on: 1994-10-27
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.50" h x 6.50" w x 1.50" l,
- Binding: Hardcover
- 399 pages
From Publishers Weekly
A talking hog with a bad attitude and a hungry humanoid with a shark's mouth in his hunchback are but two of the many loopy touches that Simmons (Lovedeath) puts into this fractured horror novel. There's also an unusual dual narration: a third-person account of the occult revenge wreaked on a ritzy but politically incorrect Hawaiian resort, and a first-person chronicle, drawn from a 19th-century diary, of similar troubles witnessed by the diarist, Lorena Stewart, and her traveling companion, the young Mark Twain. For all its eccentricities, though, the book is unlikely to add to Simmons's clutch of awards (Hugo, Bram Stoker, World Fantasy, etc.), because at heart it's powered by an utterly conventional horror premise-that nature will bite back when bitten-and because its dominant, present-time plot is peopled by cartoonish types. Chief among these is Byron Trumbo, the Trump-like tycoon who has so offended Hawaiian islanders with his sprawling resort carved into wilderness terrain that some have called upon ancient Hawaiian gods (hog and co.) and the giant volcanoes they control to destroy the resort. Simmons generates moderate suspense as Stewart's descendant and others race to save lives and souls from erupting volcanoes and malevolent gods, but not enough to avoid the reader's feeling that he should have shoehorned the entire story into the Twain segments, whose deft period charms more aptly suit the antiquated themes, characters and pyrotechnics on display. Author tour.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Billionaire Byron Trumbo wants to sell his posh Hawaiian resort to a Japanese investor but must make it appear prosperous while the deal is being struck. Due to the high prices, guests have been scarce. Unfortunately, they are becoming even scarcer as someone or something is kidnapping and murdering them. Drawn by the sketchy news accounts, Eleanor Perry has come to Mauna Pele on a sort of pilgrimage, using her aunt Kidder's 1866 travel diary as a guidebook. The events Kidder chronicled-tales of demons conjured up to rid the island of missionaries-seem to parallel the current events. As volcanoes erupt and vengeful gods and demons become more violent, Eleanor and her fellow guest, the indomitable Cordie Stumpf, attempt to get to the bottom of things. Simmons (Children of the Night, LJ 7/92) is well known for his science fiction and horror writing, and this new work is as rich in Hawaiian mythology as it is in suspense. For most popular collections.
A.M.B. Amantia, Population Action International, Washington, D.C.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
A period romance masquerading as a metaphysical thriller disguised as a buddy movie, this latest novel from Simmons (Lovedeath, 1993, etc.) bridges two centuries and offers lots of plucky fun along the way. The smoldering garden of the title is Hawaii, where the golf- starved Japanese who have come to purchase billionaire Byron Trumbo's sprawling resort are as likely to discover severed hands on the 14th green as they are to encounter a giant talking pig that devours souls. Historian Eleanor Perry has a different motive for her visit--to solve the mystery of her Great Great Great Great Aunt Kidder, whose Hawaiian adventures with Mark Twain in 1866 will be paralleled by Perry's own. In each era, a grumpy cabal of local priests summons the forces of darkness to rid the islands of an unwanted white plague--missionaries in Aunt Kidder's day, real- estate tycoons in Perry's. Shifting deftly between the mid-1800s and the present, Simmons uses Aunt Kidder's journal to recount her unlikely romantic gambol with Samuel Clemens, not yet Mark Twain but acid-tongued nonetheless. The pair's climactic scene together, in which Kidder and Clemens slather themselves with rotten kukui- nut oil and descend naked into the underworld, approaches inspired hilarity without compromising suspense. Never really too cloying in its symmetries, the novel supplies Perry with her own confederates, who, while not possessed of Clemens's legendary wit, are substantially more than cardboard action figures. In a useful twist, it's Cordie Stumpf, Perry's hard-drinking sister in arms, who, with a reluctant Trumbo as her Twain, battles the novel's pig- god Mephistopheles to reclaim Perry's captured ghost and save the imperiled resort. Allying the women, literally, with female volcanic deities, Simmons even wedges a feminist angle into his already bulging anthropological primer. The flip side of a Don Ho single, short on poi and ukuleles but long on elemental carnage, vengeful immortals, and nimble plotting. -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Most helpful customer reviews
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Have always enjoyed this novel
By karen marks
Have always enjoyed this novel, Dan Simmons paints a picture with his prose. Just wish it was on Audable too.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
Not his best, but still good
By Robert Beveridge
Knowing what I know of the writing of Dan Simmons, I expected this to be a science-fiction novel when I picked it up a couple of years ago. I never even read the synopsis, and promptly forgot I owned it. Turns out I was about as far off as i could be. I wouldn't exactly call it fantasy, and I wouldn't exactly call it horror, and I wouldn't exactly call it an environmental novel (though that's probably closest to the truth, with shades of such ecodisaster scenarios Prophecy, the Godzilla movies, and suchlike running through it). It has aspects of all of them, but never turns into a full-blown anything, preferring to defy categorization like many of Simmons' best books do.
Byron Trumbo is a billionaire with an attitude, a pending divorce, two young lovers who don't know about each other, and a money-pit Hawaiian resort he's trying to palm off on a group of Japanese investors who want to make it into a golf club. The problem is, people keep disappearing at Mauna Pele, and pieces of them turn up at the worst possible times. Add to this two intrepid adventurers who have come to Mauna Pele for different reasons (spoilers, again...) and who band together to try and solve the murders, an overly curious treehugger art curator who was hired after threatening to sue Trumbo for bulldozing over duck ponds, a crazed, murderous Hawaiian separatist, and a dimwitted pair of security guards, and the scene is set for a rollicking good time. All of the major characters are well-done and believable, if a little over the top sometimes (while I'm not usually one to balk at such things, the seemingly constant use of profanity in the book threw me for a loop; I could have done with less of it). Add cuts where we read sections of the main character's great-great-aunt's diary; the main character, Eleanor, is following in her aunt's footsteps, recreating a journey Aunt Kidder took with Samuel Clemens to the volcanoes on the Big Island (back when Americans knew Hawaii as the Sandwich Islands).
This was one of the conceits that annoyed me in the book, and it wouldn't have annoyed me if it hadn't been done so many times: we find ourselves at a cliffhanger and the diary narration takes over again. The first time, I liked it. The second time, I liked it. The third time, I liked it a little less. And so on. However, that was the only real mark against the novel, and I have to say it certainly held my interest up to the very last page. Definitely worth looking out for.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
Don't tick off the goddess
By Michael Battaglia
If Simmons wasn't such a darn good writer this probably could have been an absurdly silly book, all the warning signs are there. Giant talking god animals, people dropping like flies, nature rebelling against man's injustice to it, stuff like that. And yet Simmons pulls it all together and manages to make something good of it. The setting here is appropriately Hawaii at a hotel that billionaire Bryan Tumbo is trying to desperately sell to the Japanese, unfortunately for him, his few guests keep dying off, killed by some utterly sadistic and vaguely supernatural forces. Into this mess come our heroes and as things escalate (as you know they will) the puny humans trying to stay alive around the erupting volcanoes becomes a backdrop for the conflict of god versus god. And really it all works. Simmons has a knack for making even the patently silly (giant talking pigs with eight eyes) sincerely frightening and while the book probably isn't horror so much as old time adventure (it's pretty scary toward the beginning but once you know what's going on the fright factor goes away) with a bit of a feminist slant you're having too much of a grand old time to really care. Even better he intersperses the narrative with another narrative taken from someone's diary about similar events in 1866, featuring none other than Samuel Clemens (psst . . . Mark Twain) who Simmons writes so well that if he didn't talk like that, he should have. The diary also gives Simmons the opportunity to create twice the suspense by flashing back and forth between the two (though less so in the diary, she's obviously writing it after it's all over so you know she has to live to write it). Of course the story feels more suited for the old fashioned nineteenth century setting but Simmons' gift for description (especially of the contrast between the lush Hawaiian surroundings and the primal violence of the volcano) and his ability to immerse you in that setting. Events get so over the top after a while that you have no choice but to be swept away with it and his plotting is as deft as ever. And while I thought the climax lacked a bit in suspense it's still entertaining as all heck. Yeah it won't win him any awards but that's not the point here, he's just out to spin a good yarn and that's what we got...Track it down if you can to see an excellent author cutting loose and having some (admittedly well researched) fun with a story.
Fires of Eden, by Dan Simmons PDF
Fires of Eden, by Dan Simmons EPub
Fires of Eden, by Dan Simmons Doc
Fires of Eden, by Dan Simmons iBooks
Fires of Eden, by Dan Simmons rtf
Fires of Eden, by Dan Simmons Mobipocket
Fires of Eden, by Dan Simmons Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar