Six of Doris Piserchia's sf novels are now on Kindle for $3.99. (You'd think Hachette could afford to give them covers.) Piserchia is one of those writers who would probably be more famous if she had been male, or written under a male pseudonym. Then she might have been considered ground-breaking and innovative, rather than merely weird. Her books are wild space adventures with a distinctly hallucinatory atmosphere, often starring young women who go for what they want, whether it's sex or adventure, with no regard whatsoever for the proper place of women or what others might think of them. Sadly, that attitude is still rare.

Typical summary (minus female protagonist): It all began when someone tried to push Creed into the flesh pool to be ingested. The assassination failed, but Creed was never the same again. Because it launched the new cliff-dwellers of Creed's colony onto a new course of life - which could lead to humanity's re-emergence as Earth's masters.

In those far future days, Earth's masters were two trees. Not trees as we know them, but two Everest-high growths, whose sentient roots and fast-growing branches dominated every living thing on the world. Men lived between their arboreal combat.


A few quotes from Goodreads:

Levi: Pretty much as bizarre as I remember. I think another reviewer called Piserchia's work dreamlike, and I'm going to second that description. The kind of dream where everything is extraordinarily complex but it all makes perfect sense at the time and it's only when you try to describe it later that you realize you don't quite know where to start.

Vroom: Still delightful, decades later. I remain convinced Piserchia was either heavily medicated or using recreational pharmaceuticals when writing this. My favorite of her writing.

I remember enjoying Spaceling and Star Rider.

My next mention is not a rec per se given that I have not yet had a chance to read it, and it is less easy to obtain than one might expect from an e-book. But this is the sort of thing that I bet a small but select few of you might really, really like.

Graydon Saunders was one of the most interesting posters on rec.arts.sf.written and .composition back in the Usenet Cretaceous Period. Every now and then, he would post excerpts of his fiction. It was completely obvious to me that he was a very good writer, and also that he was way too strange of a writer to ever be published by a major publishing house. His excerpts, which were always quite evocative and beautiful, tended to read as if they were written from an alternate dimension in which fantasy had taken a completely different direction than it did in our world, and the ur-influences were not Tolkien and Lewis, but Beowulf, Njal's Saga, and "Uncleftish Beholding."

He finally self-published his book. Here it is! The March North, by Graydon Saunders Read the comments to this review for an explanation of how to obtain it. I'm sure Graydon would send a copy if you ask.

ETA: Explanation of how to purchase it is now in the comments of the LJ entry.
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)

From: [personal profile] carbonel


I just bought Graydon's book from Google Play. The review comment you link to says "(_The March North_ is self-published as an e-book. If you buy it from Google Play you can download a DRM-free EPUB file. I think it's in the Kobo store too.)"

However, I am now totally failing at how to download said DRM-free ePub file. I can read it online (which I don't want to do) or get the Google Play app (which I don't want to do).

Help?

From: [identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com


Ask Graydon. I know nothing about Google Play - it's so complicated that my own books aren't on it. I think he'll be emailed if you leave a comment in the thread to the review I linked. Since you already paid for it, if all else fails he could email you a copy.
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)

From: [personal profile] carbonel


While I have met Graydon in person a couple of times, and connected a lot online in the past, I don't actually have his e-mail address. And I don't think I can leave a comment at Goodreads without having an account there, which I don't.

I am currently fulminating at Google, because apparently the way -- the only way -- to download books from Google Play is to install Chrome. Given that I already have IE, Firefox, and Opera installed on my computer, I really don't see a need for a fourth browser. Had I realized that little fact first, I'm not sure Google would have ever got my $3.85.

Fucking feudal Internet.

(I understand that this is all from the land of Not Your Problem, but if I'm having these issues, probably other people will as well -- so if there's a solution, I'd rather it were public.)

From: [identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com


I'll leave a comment on your behalf.

The truly remarkable inaccessibility of the e-book somehow seems emblematic of the probable reasons why it was self-published.
ellarien: Blue/purple pansy (Default)

From: [personal profile] ellarien


It works in Firefox for me. In the Google Play Store, go to My Books, then hover over the top-right-hand corner of the book cover and click on the three dots that appear. That should get you a popup menu in which the last entry is 'download epub.'

(Having done that, I promptly converted it to mobi and sideloaded it on my Kindle ...) It's worth the bit of extra hassle.
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)

From: [personal profile] carbonel


THANK YOU VERY MUCH. (Yes, I'm yelling. Politely.)

That works in IE as well. I don't know how I ever would have discovered that on my own.

I use an ePub reader by default, so I'm set now that I've downloaded the file.
rmc28: Rachel in hockey gear on the frozen fen at Upware, near Cambridge (Default)

From: [personal profile] rmc28


Thank you for that! I now have the epub on my phone without having to install yet another ereader app. (And when I next use the computer that has calibre on it, I can backup to mobi and my kindle)

From: [identity profile] graydon saunders (from livejournal.com)


If it's any consolation, the "hover the cover" part of the process has stymied a couple of experienced programmers of my acquaintance.

Ellarien's instructions are correct for how one downloads from Google Play Books.
.

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