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Loading... A Policy of Liesby Astrid Amara
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There is a strange dichotomy in this story: the setting is futuristic, and usually this leads to quite unbelievable events, where all is simplified by technology and where feelings sometime are detached by bodies. For example, Tiergan is a doctor, and the machinery he uses for his work are implanted in him... But this story in particularly has a very earth to earth feeling in it; the world where they live is not aseptic and detached, it smells and has a dark aurea around it, it's not shining and glittering like the shuttles that fly in the sky.
Apart from the story which starts the book, the riot in a mine planet, the loneliness of a young boy and the work of a mourning doctor who wants only to help the poorer, what gave me the feeling of reality was also the relationship between Levi and Tiergan, above all the small details. It's not much the sexual act per se, but more what happens next, how the lovers see each other, how they look at the small details of the other, like a spent penis, or the small scars in the sleeping body next to him, or the smell that pervades the room after sex.
Astrid Amara works more on the details than in the big futuristic picture and she is very good at it. Usually I'm not very fond of futuristic genre, and usually it takes me a lot to finish a book, and instead I devoured the almost 200 pages in only one night.