Great Sky Woman.Great Sky Woman by Steven Barnes One World/Ballantine Books, July 2006 $24.95, ISBN 0-345-45900-8 The latest offering from speculative fiction writer Steven Barnes is set in prehistoric Africa and is the first of two novels about the Ibandi, a tribe of hunter-gatherers. In this first installment, the Ibandi live in the plains near Mount Kilimanjaro Kilimanjaro (kĭl'ĭmənjä`rō), highest mountain of Africa, NE Tanzania. An extinct volcano, it rises in two peaks, Uhuru (Kibo; 19,340 ft/5,895 m, Africa's highest point) and Mawenzi (17,564 ft/5,354 m), which are joined by a broad saddle (alt. c.15,000 ft/4,600 m).. Frog Hopping, a boy, longs to become a great hunter. T'Cori Gerty Theresa Radnitz 1896-1957. Czech-born American biochemist. She shared a 1947 Nobel Prize with her husband, Carl Ferdinand Cori (1896-1984), and Bernardo A. Houssay for discovering the intermediate steps in glycogen-glucose conversion. Great Sky Woman may have particular resonance for African American readers, helping us imagine the history (and prehistory prehistory, period of human evolution before writing was invented and records kept. The term was coined by Daniel Wilson in 1851. It is followed by protohistory, the period for which we have some records but must still rely largely on archaeological evidence to provide a coherent account. The study of prehistory is concerned with the activities of a society or culture, not of the individual, and is limited to the material evidence that has survived.) we lost when we were dragged to this land. But the novel doesn't just recall far-gone epochs. Given the genocide that has bloodied Africa in recent years, Great Sky Woman also speaks to our time. No matter how much the world inside a fantasy or science fiction novel differs from our own, it is always similar in fundamental ways. After all, what writers of such books know about humanity and life, they know from riving in this world. While Barnes manages his narrative rather well on a macro level, there are flaws at the micro level. Too often, he tells us what a character is feeling, rather than showing us: "All night and day ... she had felt her anxiety threaten to swirl out of control." Dangling modifiers and cliches trouble some of the sentences. There's also an inconsistency--at one point, Barnes forgets that Frog's stepfather has only one eye: "There was some hidden fire in Snake's eyes." Despite these glitches, Great Sky Woman will not lose Barnes any fans. It will probably gain him some. --Reviewed by Dana Crum |
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