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Swiftly
Swiftly: A Novel | Adam Roberts
4 posts | 1 read | 5 to read
It is 1848 and the British Empire has grown rich exploiting Lilliputian slaves - the finesse of their working allowing unheard of feats of minature engineering; even Babbage's computing device has been made to work. But now the French have formed a regiment of previously peaceful Brobdingnagian giants and invasion looms. In a world where humanity is both smaller and larger than it once was, love and hate loom large. Mankind discovers itself at the centre of scale. Lilliputians are twelve times smaller than us but there are those twelve times smaller than them, and twelve times smaller again and so on. And the scale of being goes up from Swift's giants also ... Adam Roberts has written both a rip roaring 19th century adventure, a love story and a thought-provoking pre-atomic SF novel about our place in the universe.
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review
TobeyTheScavengerMonk
Swiftly: A Novel | Adam Roberts
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Mehso-so

Right in the middle of this book set in an England where the islands of tiny people, giants, and talking horses from Jonathan Swift‘s Gulliver‘s Travels were discovered and colonized, we get a lengthy look into the sexual kinks of our three pretty despicable protagonists, which veer to the scatalogical.

This is a fascinating, thoughtful, and exceptionally well-crafted novel but I just can‘t give it a Pick because of all the, quite literal, shit.

TobeyTheScavengerMonk I‘m assuming it was an intentional homage to Swift‘s tendency to focus on the human body and its processes in his literature, but still, dude, ew. (edited) 6y
mabell Scatalogical 😂 Nice 👍 6y
Suet624 Good to know! 6y
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quote
TobeyTheScavengerMonk
Swiftly: A Novel | Adam Roberts

“He was on the verge of obtaining his heart‘s dream, perhaps; a more alarming prospect than the verge of one‘s own death. For after all death, whatever else it may be when it comes to us, is not going to be a disappointment.”

quote
TobeyTheScavengerMonk
Swiftly: A Novel | Adam Roberts
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blurb
TobeyTheScavengerMonk
Swiftly: A Novel | Adam Roberts
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My favorite thing in fiction is when an author takes a fantastic idea and then digs in, examining the cultural, economic, and psychological effects of said fantastic idea.

Swiftly does just that, describing a world where Jonathan Swift‘s Gulliver‘s Travels really happened and the British Empire promptly assaulted, colonized and/or enslaved the magical islands of little people, giants, and talking horses that Gulliver described.

Great so far!

Doughtah Woah! That sounds rough, but also really interesting! 6y
TobeyTheScavengerMonk @Doughtah That is an extremely accurate description of the tone so far. 6y
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