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Loading... Wakulla Springs: A Tor.Com Original (original 2013; edition 2013)by Andy Duncan, Ellen Klages
Work InformationWakulla Springs by Andy Duncan (Author) (2013)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Enjoyable, character-centered novella revolving around a deep Florida spring steeped in legend and mystery. Not much plot. Not much science fiction. Extra fun for fans of old Tarzan movies and mid-Century sci-fi flicks. ( ) Hugo-nominated Novella I only put this down when forced to. Only 4 stars because it didn't go where I expected it to go. More of my thoughts on the story here. Contains spoilers: http://ciaracatscifi.blogspot.com/2014/04/wakulla-springs-by-andy-duncan-and.htm... A story about family, tradition, and fulfilling your dreams. It was wonderful, beautifully written, some sections leaving me unbearably sad and the final section uplifting me. My one problem with this story is that it's barely genre. There's no hint of genre at all during the first two sections, and only small hints during the latter two. Fine, but no real plot. Fortunately, I read this long after acquiring so forgot the book description. If I read it with the description of monsters and mystery in mind I'd have been quite disappointed. This is a nice narrative with interesting character development, particularly in first 2 parts. Recommend for a light summer read. Not What I Expected! It’s said that the Wakulla Springs wilderness – including the fifteen miles of caves which cuts through the water’s depths - is home to a menagerie of creatures, both real and mythical: black panthers, rhesus macaques, the Clearwater Monster, the Skunk Ape, and a thousand-pound hammerhead known as Old Hitler. Yet “Wakulla Springs” is less a tale about monsters than it is the journey of one family (and, by extension, the evolution of social mores and attitudes). Beginning with matriarch Mayola, the story of the Williamses is inexorably linked to the Springs: by culture, tradition, and superstition – and a series of cheesy Tarzan movies shot on location in Wakulla County, Florida. The plot’s surprisingly sparse, especially given the story’s length and description. (“Wakulla Springs” reads more like a novella than a short story.) Each of the four parts or chapters focuses on a different member of the Williams clan, and his or her experiences with Wakulla Springs and the exclusive, “whites only” resort situated on its banks. Cultural signposts indicate each segment’s particular timeline; while African-American Mayola tries to pursue her education in the Jim Crow south, by story’s end we meet her granddaughter, Dr. Anna Williams – a multiracial woman of African-American, white, and Cuban descent – visiting Wakulla Springs during sabbatical to study the encroachment of invasive species into the area. It makes for an enjoyable and engaging read, even if most of the “monsters” we meet are of the human and institutional variety. P.S.: Free Cheetah! http://www.easyvegan.info/2014/10/16/wakulla-springs-by-andy-duncan-and-ellen-kl... no reviews | add a review
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Winner of the World Fantasy Award for Best Novella Wakulla Springs, in the deep jungle of the Florida panhandle, is the deepest submerged freshwater cave system in the world. In its unfathomable depths, a variety of curious creatures have left a record of their coming, of their struggle to survive, and of their eventual end. And that's just the local human beings over the last seventy-five years. Then there are the prehistoric creatures...and, just maybe, something else. Ranging from the late 1930s to the present day, "Wakulla Springs" is a tour de force of the human, the strange, and the miraculous. At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied. No library descriptions found. |
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