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Paperback Canopus in Argos: Archives Book

ISBN: 0679741844

ISBN13: 9780679741848

Canopus in Argos: Archives

(Part of the Canopus in Argos Series)

No Synopsis Available.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Obscure Discordian Masterpiece

Many who read this book would be shocked to learn that Doris Lessing dropped out of school at the age of 14, considering the breadth of knowledge she displays. Maybe they would be less surprised to learn that this series was written shortly after she began studying Sufism. This series not only presents a clever way of providing some persective on human affairs, it also give to us a mythology of prehistory as valid as any other I've come across. The Canopean view of Shammat as not necessarily "evil" and the idea of "forced evolution" were especially valuable to me. Some parts may be difficult but I found it all highly stimulating and obviously it is very well written. If you're unfamiliar with Chinese culture or have no background knowledge, a book on Chinese history may seem terribly boring to you. Similarly, these books may bore you if you haven't any interest in pre-history or spiritual dimensions. This is a work of science fiction and those who appreciate the genre should enjoy it, however, it is one of those pieces with a broader appeal, perhaps comparable to some of Vonnegut's work. Robert Anton Wilson's introduction to his illustrated screenplay, Reality is What You Can Get Away With, is an homage to this book and confirmed a feeling I had that this should be added to the Discordian Canon. I know very few who have read this marvel and none who were disappointed. I keep my volumes in a place of honor.

Will stay with you for life

One of the most rewarding and thought-provoking series of books you are likely to ever read in your life. By all means go and get them. Of particular interest to me over the years have been "Shikasta" (which I have come to think of as a fascinating parable about the directions you are going to take with your own life and why) and "The Marriages Between Zones Three, Four And Five" (a gut-wrenching "fairy tale" about relationships between women and men). Both of those books beautifully show how conditioning cripples our abilities to perceive and evolve. To do this from a space fiction point of view was highly unusual (to say the least) at the point in time the books were written, but with regard to today's smudging of the borders between genres, this seems more commonplace. Anyone interested in the concepts related to the description of Zone 6 (Shikasta), might also enjoy reading "The Active Side Of Infinity" by Carlos Castaneda, whereas women wrestling with the relationship-related kind of conditioning (Marriages), may find "The Sorcerer's Crossing" by Taisha Abelar as interesting as I did.

Thoughtful, imaginative, thrilling

I am afraid this book may turn out to have a limited audience: too literary and "unrealistic" for science-fiction fans, and too fantastic for literary types. Too bad, because this is a stupendous book, or rather, series of novels. Some may think it strange that an author with as high-brow a reputation as Doris Lessing would stoop to writing "space fiction" (her term), but she has been incorporating sci-fi elements in her fiction as far back as The Four-Gated City, and maybe farther, depending on your definitions. What is science fiction if not the use of extreme and imaginative settings to point out truths invisible in our crowded world? Science fiction encourages "thinking outside the box," a concept that Lessing has explored in a lifetime of ground-breaking work. What are we? What does it mean to be human? Is there more? Lessing hits these questions with a courageous mind and an arsenal of experience and imagination.

doris lessing, as usual ,is difficult but provocative

I think that it is fascinating that Ms. Lessing resorts to science (she calls it 'space')fiction to tell her story. It is really several stories and I think each book can be read on its own. They are better read as a whole. I particularly liked the story of the bureaucrat from Sirius. That book is a terrific analysis of a conscientious and pragmatic official who is completely in the dark and how life is gradually illuminated for her. It is a very well written book and I recommend all for any readers but particularly the first, Shikasta, and the Sirius Experiments. ( It has been 10 years since I read these)

A brilliant analysis of our civilisation

These 5 novels are difficult reading but well worth the effort. Doris Lessing has taken her uncanny observation of the treachery of mankind and translated it into a narrative as presented by beings from Canopus. What they think of us, how they've influenced us. "Shikasta..." is the most harsh, and the most accurate and my favourite of the set. "The Marriages..." is a beautiful fairy tale. "The Sirian Experiments..." is an alternative view of "Shikasta" and a brilliant depiction of humankind. "The Representative..." is a beautifully written fantasy of a dying planet. "The Sentimental Agents" is a scathing, excellent commentary on the arrogance of rhetoric. Ours, of course... While these novels appear to be science fiction, they really are not. They are "Space Fiction" and are a thought-provoking, sometimes beautiful, but always brilliant view of our world and possible others...
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