Fotografía de autor

Jane Palmer (1) (1946–)

Autor de The Planet Dweller

Para otros autores llamados Jane Palmer, ver la página de desambiguación.

Jane Palmer (1) se ha aliado con Dandi Palmer.

10+ Obras 203 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Series

Obras de Jane Palmer

Las obras han sido aliasadas en Dandi Palmer.

The Planet Dweller (1985) — Artista de Cubierta — 88 copias
The Watcher (1986) 66 copias
Moving Moosevan (1990) 20 copias
When She's Gone: A Thriller (2016) 19 copias
The Drune (1999) 3 copias
Nightingale (2009) 1 copia
Simply Flowers, Summer (2012) 1 copia
Simply Flowers, Spring (2012) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Las obras han sido aliasadas en Dandi Palmer.

Anna ~ Charlotte (2016) — Introducción — 11 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1946
Género
female
Nacionalidad
UK

Miembros

Reseñas

It was entertaining enough but nothing really new.
 
Denunciada
pacbox | Jul 9, 2022 |
104/2020. This is the third 1980s Jane (Dandi) Palmer novel I've read, and probably the best, but I'd have difficulty describing her style beyond noting that it's highly imaginative and occasionally leaves me as a reader relying on hindsight for full understanding of what's going on. Readers who like predictable fiction and trying to think one step ahead of the plot probably won't get on with Palmer's work.

The story in this short novel is structured like two interlinked novellas, of which I liked the second better, and has as much incident as an entire season of classic Doctor Who:
Godlike aliens whose children cause problems.
Avian aliens with a global energy crisis.
Amphibian aliens with a possible solution.
An android who becomes human for love.
Astral projection and reincarnation.
Robot sea monsters.
And a murderously racist ex-husband.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
spiralsheep | Aug 12, 2020 |
Nightingale
Jane Palmer

'Four legs!' snorted Tino, the strong man, 'You never saw an alien, it was probably a goat!' (p. 1)

As first lines go, it's a funny and captivating way to start a story which only grows more interesting the further in we read.

Nightingale is set in a post-apocalyptic future, though unlike any I've ever read about before. It's not entirely clear, at first, that the planet on which it's set is earth, an earth not too far in the future where the human species has been devastated by the currently very real threats of climate change and antibiotic resistant plague. Nevertheless it's not a bad place to live – if you don't mind being nannied and wrapped in cotton wool by the World Government, with the subsequent loss of any personal stimulation and spontaneity. In this world, even the mild excitement of the circus is banned. Most people seem to enjoy the security and safety now endemic throughout the world. Others, however, fight against the stagnation, trying to keep some passion for life flourishing.

One such is the eponymous heroine, Nightingale. Many of Palmer's works are peopled with characters immediately recognisable to the reader as individuals – not necessarily likeable ones – readily met with in real life, but the septuagenarian Nightingale isn't one of them. Her purplish skin (the result of a disastrous fuel cell experiment) has something to do with it, as does her six foot plus height, her mass of wiry grey hair, and her habit of wearing multi-buckled black leather. She's autocratic, infinitely capable, and pretty fast with a gun, too. In her earlier days she had "clocked up a record in energy research that awed other scientists with twice her experience. It was her success in fuel cell development that now maximised the advances in renewable energy." (p. 21) She's now the Senior Controller of Group Indigo, a shadowy and extremely eccentric team tasked with investigating and if necessary controlling alien threats to earth.

Yes, alien threats: "World Security had been aware for several years of interdimensional alien intrusions." (p. 21) If that sounds a little like Torchwood, well, yes, there are faint echoes. But they are very faint, and don't obstruct the story. The aliens in this case are the Lictana, who have some rather special abilities... Add to the mix a young boy who can enter the other dimension and who is not altogether what he seems, an astonishingly colourful and deceptively nice World Government official meddler, and we have the ingredients for a unique and idiosyncratic tale.

It's an intriguing and often grimly funny story, told with the author's usual dry, sardonic wit. Palmer's style is succinct, the story unfolding a little like an intellectual puzzle: the reader needs to stay alert to appreciate what's happening, and to make the necessary connections between the various characters and the diverse elements of the plot. A somewhat demanding read: if your penchant is for the sci-fi equivalent of Mills and Boon, you'd be better off looking elsewhere. However, if you enjoy giving the grey matter a bit of a work out, Nightingale is well worth a try!

My only criticism would be the lack of in depth characterisations: I felt I would have liked to learn more about these very remarkable people. A little more description of the Lictanan continuum wouldn't have been out of place, either – and unfortunately I found the very end of the book disappointingly anti-climactic (the last chapter acts as an epilogue of sorts, and it's this that I refer to, not the end of the main plot, which is oddly satisfying). In the main, however, it's a very enjoyable, memorable book.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
alestrel | Jul 2, 2010 |

Listas

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Estadísticas

Obras
10
También por
1
Miembros
203
Popularidad
#108,639
Valoración
2.9
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
14

Tablas y Gráficos