Dark Constellations, Pola Oloixarac
Dark Constellations, Pola Oloixarac
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Dark Constellations

Author: Pola Oloixarac, Roy Kesey

Narrator: Justine Eyre

Unabridged: 5 hr 8 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 04/16/2019

Categories: Fiction, Science Fiction


Synopsis

Canary Islands, 1882: Caught in the nineteenth-century wave of scientific classification, explorer and plant biologist Niklas Bruunis researches Crissia pallida, a species alleged to have hallucinogenic qualities capable of eliminating the psychic limits between one human mind and another.

Buenos Aires, 1983: Born to a white Argentinian anthropologist and a black Brazilian engineer, Cassio comes of age with the Internet, and demonstrates the skills and personality that will make him one of the first great Argentine hackers.

The southern Argentinian techno-hub of Bariloche, 2024: Piera, on the same research group as Cassio, studies human DNA. When the Estromatoliton project comes to fruition, the Argentine government will be able to track every movement of its citizens without their knowledge or consent, using censors that identify DNA at a distance.

In a dazzling novel of towering ambition, Oloixarac proves that true power resides in the world's most deeply shadowed interstices, as beautiful and horrifying as dark constellations themselves.

About Pola Oloixarac

Pola Oloixarac was born in Buenos Aires in 1977. Her debut novel, Savage Theories, was a breakout bestseller in Argentina and was nominated for the Best Translated Book Award, and in 2010, Granta recognized her as one of the best young Spanish-language novelists. She was awarded the 2021 Eccles Centre & Hay Festival Writer's Award. Oloixarac is a regular contributor to the New York Times, and her fiction has appeared in Granta, n+1, the White Review, and an issue of Freeman's on "The Future of New Writing." Pre­viously a resident of San Francisco, California, she currently resides in Barcelona.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Adam on March 30, 2024

Real curate's egg thing going on here. Some parts I found tedious, some brilliant. Doesn't really cohere. Liked the cyberpunk stuff, which isn't normally my thing. Possibly has an evolution of the light/darkness of stars metaphor employed by Alan Moore/Matthew Stover/Nic Pizzolato et al, but have to......more

Goodreads review by Larry on July 28, 2019

This is exactly my kind of book tbh. I'd say read if you enjoyed "2666" and "Cloud Atlas." It swings between cyberpunk near future and darkly sexual magical realism 1880s and it's a wild ride for 215 or so pages. Alternately, it's a lost world biotech parable about exploitation. Either way it would......more

Goodreads review by Becky on August 11, 2020

??? What did I just read? I have almost no idea what happened in this novel, but I did enjoy the reading experience. (Notable exception being the uncomfortable prevalence of absurd euphemisms for the penis. Meaty joystick? WHY??) This book is packed with ideas, but I don’t feel like I was smart enou......more