
Song of Time
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Narrated by:
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Rachel Atkins
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By:
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Ian R. MacLeod
A man lies half-drowned on a Cornish beach at dawn in the furthest days of this century. The old woman who discovers him, once a famous concert violinist, is close to death herself - or perhaps a new kind of life she can barely contemplate. Does death still exist at all, or has it finally been obliterated? And who is this strange man she's found? Is he a figure returned from her past, a new Messiah, or an empty vessel? God or the Devil?
Filled with love and music, death and life, mind-bending ideas and simple humanity amid the ruins of a post-apocalyptic India, the Song of Time won both the Arthur C. Clarke and John W. Campbell awards in 2009.
©2010 Ian R. MacLeod (P)2010 Audible LtdListeners also enjoyed...




















Critic reviews
Not escapist fiction, however.
An imagined memoir of the 21st century
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Great story
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How would you have changed the story to make it more enjoyable?
I think this book could come with a cautionary label: Song of Time is a primarily dystopian look at the world of the near future, told from the vantage point of a terminally ill person.And it could have a suggested prerequisites list: Readers who understand musicians' dedication will be at an advantage.
That way, I could choose a time when I felt too cheerful, and enjoy the lovely but bleak story.
Bleak but well-written and well-performed
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excellent writing, characters, story
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Then the main character starts to remember her childhood and her brother which she worships. He is a musical genius. I listened for over an hour of this and found my mind wondering. I found I could care less about the main character and the genius brother. I am not into music or artsy fartsy uppidity David Copperfield type of listening. I decided to not waste anymore time.
Warning: I am going to get lots of unhelpful on this, because I have found that people don't read reviews to see if the want to read the book, they read the reviews later to see if they agree. So those that don't listen will just forget the book, and those that listened to the whole thing and liked it, well mark me unhelpful.
David Copperfield
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