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The Webs of Varok

por Cary Neeper

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Silver medalist, YA fiction Nautilus Book Awards Finalist, science fiction ForeWord s Book of the Year Awards In an alternate 21st century Solar System: Tandra Grey has left Earth for the ancient sustainable culture of Varok, with its promise of stability for her young daughter. But a genius with a hidden talent sets her eye on Varok's wealth and Tandra's soul mates. Tandra, the elll Conn, and the varok Orram must untangle a web of deceit to restore balance for Varok and their fragile new family. . . . engaging, multi-layered, provocative, and above all relevant to the times. . . Frank Kaminski, book reviewer for Energy Bulletin and Resilience.org . . . a page-turning struggle between the eternal themes of personal accumulation vs. the common good. Kathy Campbell, past president, League of Women Voters New Mexico . . . so many alien-imaginative twists, intrigues, and betrayals that the spellbound reader won't even realize s/he's being educated Professor William Rees, originator of the Ecological Footprint concept The second novel in Cary Neeper's Archives of Varok series, The Webs of Varok follows new, offworld adventures for the characters from Neeper's 1975 novel A Place Beyond Man, re-released in 2011. With three more titles coming in 2013-14, the five-volume Archives of Varok travels with Tandra's family on quests from Earth to the Oort Cloud with several stops in-between. Cary Neeper lives in the US Southwest with her husband and a friendly menagerie of dogs, fish and fowl. An avid proponent of sustainability and steady-state economics since the 1970s, she studied zoology, chemistry and religion at Pomona College and medical microbiology at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. Cary paints landscapes in acrylics, including the cover art for The Webs of Varok. "… (más)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 8 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I know I'm late with this review, but it took me a long time to read this book for two reasons. One, life happened. Two, I had some difficulty getting into it. As the book is not the first in it's series, it does to assume you read what came before. I hadn't even heard of it before and I could have used a little more explanation. Once I got past that though it was a very good read with a decent pace and a beautiful world to explore. I would recommend it and I think I'll be looking for other selections by this author. ( )
  Icefirestorm | Oct 3, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
This is one that I will have to put down and perhaps give another chance to at a later date. As much as I wanted to like the characters and plot, all I can keep visualizing is a threesome relationship between two alien males and a human female, with Conn (the Elll) bearing a resemblance to a cross between Jar Jar Binks and Big Bird. The names of places and species are obviously made up and detract from the story for me, as well as the technical explanations which are tossed in to make the author appear tech savvy. Sorry but not a book or series that appeals to me. ( )
  SheilaCornelisse | Apr 8, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
It was an excellently written book with good characters and and interesting enough story plot, it just ended up not being for me. It took me forever to read it because I wasn't compelled to continue. It was very confusing at the beginning for me because I wasn't able to find the first book before I started this one and this was one of the few times where I think you needed to read the previous book first.
The conflict in this story was a little too economical for me and I found myself reading the words but not paying attention. Again, the characters were well written as was the story, it just didn't appeal to me. Maybe I'll keep an eye out for the first one at my library. ( )
  midkid88 | Mar 6, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I was concerned at first that this being the second in the series I'd be lost and also I'm not a regular fan of SF books so I was hesistant at first but the summary grabbed me as something that was interesting. I was surprised with the book and really enjoyed reading it. I caught myself reading later than I probably should have just to finish up a spot. I think this would be a good "I've never read a SF novel before and don't know where to start" type of book. Very imaginative and creative. ( )
  rayneofdarkness | Feb 2, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
The best science-fiction/fantasy novels are ones that lie outside the stereotypes of either genre. I abhor reading fantasy just for fantasies' sake. Why escape to another world when you return to the same world as the same person? I like to have meaning in my books, something with meat on it, that I can rip away and take with me. Certainly, there will be a few times when Anne McCaffrey's books will call to me, something light, but usually, I want something more along the lines of Orson Scott Card, where larger moral issues are addressed. In fact, when I read and review books, especially of the sci-fi variety, my question always is, "How would OSC write this?" If I find the answer is, "Just like this," then I know I've found a good book. And such is The Webs of Varok by Cary Neeper.

What surprised me was that this wasn't the first book in this series, but the second. Neeper wrote a book about Alien first contact in 1975, called A Place Beyond Man (which was redone in 2011 as The View Beyond Earth). However, it's not completely necessary to read the other book to understand what's going on. The prologue does an ample job of getting everything set. Further, the forward tells us that what Neeper is trying to do is to create a society with a self-sustaining environment, incorporating population control, a regulatory business trade, and a Utopian system of government based on the idea that citizens are content to live their lives within the confines of regulations in order to prevent the previous cataclysms where ecological and economical systems spiraled out of control. In fact, the book is more about this idea than anything else, leading one to believe that the plot means nothing and that it's going to be the author preaching at us the whole time. This is very far from being true.

The characters, Tandra, the human, Conn, the Elll, and Orram, the Varok, are all very well constructed, done with dialogue, much as OSC would do. In fact, Neeper does an amazing job creating all of the sentient beings on Jupiter's hidden moon. Ellls are aquatic beings who survive on land using clothing that remains wet. They are sensuous beings, outgoing and social. The Varoks, for whom the moon is named, were the main sentient beings until whatever cataclysm befell upon them (a biological war, as it turns out), ripping apart their sense of touch. They have relied upon their development of mental communication, reading each other's minds. In fact, this is the main crux of the novel, that Varoks cannot lie to each other. This keeps the world in check, for no one is able to do anything illegal without being caught. This is the same outcome of Clarke & Baxter's technology of wormhole usage in The Light of Other Days. Thus the world can operate completely differently than Earth. The downside of this is that Neeper (as the characters in the book) would recommend using the same regulations of Varok here on Earth, in present day society. This, of course, is impossible, because human nature will not acquiesce to total regulation by a government. It was tried before, called Communism, and it didn't work, for precisely that reason.

I remember walking through the park here in Conyers, and trying to come up with a society that could live in harmony with the beauty that I was seeing around me. And having read Ayn Rand and being against governmental control of the individual, I tried to overcome the weaknesses of Rand's world and our own. The only way I could do it was with population control and economic controls that would forbid companies from making forced obsolescence a part of the economic system (see my blog on the forever light bulb coming from Clifford D. Simak's book Ring Around the Sun. In fact, when I stopped thinking about it that day, I had come up with a society very similar to Neeper's Varok, but with the large problem of making people honest with themselves and others. Only a biological or technological breakthrough would accomplish this.

I give The Webs of Varok 4/5 stars on the systems of Goodreads and others because of a couple of plot issues that happen late in the book that threw me off. It might be that something distracted me at the sentence where Orram's disappearance happened, or something. It's not always the book's fault, but I can't reconcile it. I do recommend the book, even to conservatives who would find reading a book written with liberal ideas repulsive. You'll like it. You'll even agree with most of the ideas in the book. They are ideals that conservatives and liberals must strive for (and the goals are usually the same, just arrived at in two totally different ways). I have the first book (75) version, and will get the '11 version, too, and see what differences there are. It looks like the '75 book deals with the differences between the three species, especially those of social and sensual nature. I hope that these books are done as well as this book. I look forward to reading them. ( )
  DenzilPugh | Jan 22, 2013 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 8 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
In this gripping sequel to Cary Neeper’s debut novel, A Place Beyond Man (The Archives of Varok), the main protagonist, Tandra Grey, leaves behind the confines of an Earth that is in economic and ecological decay, and travels with her new alien family to the moon of Jupiter called Varok.

You may think that your family is strange, but Tandra’s is…unique, to say the least...

...makes Varok seem like it could be a real place with a myriad of life forms.

The Webs of Varok is a spellbinding read and a great addition to Neeper’s series, “The Archives of Varok.”
añadido por sworkman | editarBook Spot Central, Douglass Cobb (Nov 15, 2012)
 

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“Push off and sail up here, Tandra. You need to hear this.”
I didn’t like the elll’s uncharacteristic dry tone. My soul-brother, the aquatic member of our new family, Conn had not spoken English since we left Earth’s moon. Goose bumps surged up my arms.
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Silver medalist, YA fiction Nautilus Book Awards Finalist, science fiction ForeWord s Book of the Year Awards In an alternate 21st century Solar System: Tandra Grey has left Earth for the ancient sustainable culture of Varok, with its promise of stability for her young daughter. But a genius with a hidden talent sets her eye on Varok's wealth and Tandra's soul mates. Tandra, the elll Conn, and the varok Orram must untangle a web of deceit to restore balance for Varok and their fragile new family. . . . engaging, multi-layered, provocative, and above all relevant to the times. . . Frank Kaminski, book reviewer for Energy Bulletin and Resilience.org . . . a page-turning struggle between the eternal themes of personal accumulation vs. the common good. Kathy Campbell, past president, League of Women Voters New Mexico . . . so many alien-imaginative twists, intrigues, and betrayals that the spellbound reader won't even realize s/he's being educated Professor William Rees, originator of the Ecological Footprint concept The second novel in Cary Neeper's Archives of Varok series, The Webs of Varok follows new, offworld adventures for the characters from Neeper's 1975 novel A Place Beyond Man, re-released in 2011. With three more titles coming in 2013-14, the five-volume Archives of Varok travels with Tandra's family on quests from Earth to the Oort Cloud with several stops in-between. Cary Neeper lives in the US Southwest with her husband and a friendly menagerie of dogs, fish and fowl. An avid proponent of sustainability and steady-state economics since the 1970s, she studied zoology, chemistry and religion at Pomona College and medical microbiology at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. Cary paints landscapes in acrylics, including the cover art for The Webs of Varok. "

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