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Biting the Sun by Tanith Lee
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Biting the Sun (edition 1999)

by Tanith Lee

Series: four-BEE (omnibus 1-2)

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6821133,660 (4.18)37
In a world dedicated to pleasure, one young rebel sets out on a forbidden quest. Published for the first time in a single volume, Tanith Lee's duet of novels set in a hedonistic Utopia are as riveting and revolutionary as they were when they first appeared two decades ago. It's a perfect existence, a world in which no pleasure is off-limits, no risk is too dangerous, and no responsibilities can cramp your style. Not if you're Jang: a caste of libertine teenagers in the city of Four BEE. But when you're expected to make trouble--when you can kill yourself on a whim and return in another body, when you're encouraged to change genders at will and experience whatever you desire--you've got no reason to rebel . . . until making love and raising hell, daring death and running wild just leave you cold and empty. Ravenous for true adventures of the mind and body, desperate to find some meaning, one restless spirit finally bucks the system--and by shattering the rules, strikes at the very heart of a soulless society. . . .… (more)
Member:bacteriaphage
Title:Biting the Sun
Authors:Tanith Lee
Info:Spectra (1999), Mass Market Paperback, 384 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:*****
Tags:None

Work Information

Biting the Sun by Tanith Lee

  1. 10
    Black Unicorn by Tanith Lee (sandstone78)
    sandstone78: Biting the Sun and the Unicorn trilogy share a desert setting, a young female (or predominantly female, at least) protagonist, and Lee's lush, gorgeous prose.
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» See also 37 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 11 (next | show all)
What can I say other than groshing ooma, absolutely groshing

okay, maybe I can add just a bit more....
This book came very close to ending up on my "did not finish" list.
If it hadn't come with such high recommendations and fervent insistence that I read it, I would have given up early.
But I'm glad I didn't.
I've come off of reading space operas with sweeping epic story lines. Or at least sci fi books where the fate of worlds of even universes rests on the leading character.
This book is different. It's almost more of a slice of life book. There's a little more going on than just that, but large parts of it are just the protagonist (who isn't named) doing their day to day thing. There isn't some big evil world ending enemy. And the people in this book live sheltered lives where suicide can be either a hobby and a way to get a new body. So their lives aren't generally in mortal danger. So in the first page sof this book I found myself thinking "blah blah blah, you're spoiled, immortal, and bored... I get it.. and I don't care".
And then a little deeper in and i was thinking "okay, I care a little".
That's when I just kinda relaxed, and stopped expecting anything momentous to happen and just enjoyed.
If you can relax and just enjoy the story as it unfolds at a leisurely pace, this story will pull you in over time. And it has what I thought was a nice satisfying conclusion.

Oh, and the slang is jarring at first and feels forced in the beginning. But by the end it feels natural, and it actually plays a part in the story. And as a bit of evidence on how well it works, I'm writing this review a bit over a week after finishing the book and i'm still finding myself using the slang terms from the book in my inner thoughts, how zaradann is that oomas? ( )
3 vote WinterEgress | Dec 2, 2022 |
One of the books I read in 2010, when I got horribly behind on reviewing and recording books. I had read a large excerpt from this book in my Gendering class in college and always intended to find the book and read the rest of it. I finally did. Many interesting ideas about gender, society, the value of work and the land. ( )
  greeniezona | Dec 6, 2017 |
Love love the world building, but it is strangely heteronormative for such a gender fluid society.

SPOILER, MILD

ends with some Nice Guy bullshit that I could really have done without. ( )
1 vote ansate | May 25, 2017 |
I read Tanith Lee’s Biting the Sun in three days. I read a little bit one evening and again the next, intending to carry on like that, but I really got into it and spent the larger part of the next day finishing it. I couldn't help myself - it's a really absorbing read.

I believe that I read in some article online that Tanith Lee is not a great believer in genres, but if I had to pigeonhole this I suppose I’d call it science fiction.

I suppose the idea of an ‘utopian’ city where everyone lives in pampered idleness is not at all original, but I doubt if many paint it as vividly or imaginatively as Lee. One of her great strengths is her ability to paint vivid and colourful images in the reader's mind.

The story concerns a heroine (basically a heroine – as so often with Lee, gender boundaries are fluid) who doesn’t fit in this utopia, and how she continually causes problems and eventually gets banished to the outside desert, and her life out there. I suppose it can be read as an allegory for the journey from dependent adolescence to self-reliant adulthood.

Obviously, from the above, I think this a very good novel, but the thing that is really astonishing me is that Lee can be so extraordinarily prolific an author and yet, as far as I’ve read so far, maintain her standards of quality and inventiveness. Good stuff. ( )
  alaudacorax | Apr 11, 2015 |
I really enjoyed this. I wish I could write articulate reviews....
This book was awesome on so many levels. ( )
  davisfamily | Feb 15, 2015 |
Showing 1-5 of 11 (next | show all)
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» Add other authors (1 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Lee, Tanithprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Goodfellow, PeterCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Kraft, Kinuko YCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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four-BEE (omnibus 1-2)
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My friend Hergal had killed himself again.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
Drinking Sapphire Wine is a title in Tanith Lee's Series, "four-BEE" (the Series also known in French as "Le bain des limbes"). It can be EITHER the second volume of that Series alone, or combined with the first volume (Don't Bite the Sun) in an omnibus of the same title, later reprinted as Biting the Sun.

Please distinguish between editions of Drinking Sapphire Wine alone, and those including Don't Bite the Sun. Thank you.
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In a world dedicated to pleasure, one young rebel sets out on a forbidden quest. Published for the first time in a single volume, Tanith Lee's duet of novels set in a hedonistic Utopia are as riveting and revolutionary as they were when they first appeared two decades ago. It's a perfect existence, a world in which no pleasure is off-limits, no risk is too dangerous, and no responsibilities can cramp your style. Not if you're Jang: a caste of libertine teenagers in the city of Four BEE. But when you're expected to make trouble--when you can kill yourself on a whim and return in another body, when you're encouraged to change genders at will and experience whatever you desire--you've got no reason to rebel . . . until making love and raising hell, daring death and running wild just leave you cold and empty. Ravenous for true adventures of the mind and body, desperate to find some meaning, one restless spirit finally bucks the system--and by shattering the rules, strikes at the very heart of a soulless society. . . .

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Book description
It's jang to be wild and sexy and reckless.
It's jang to change your body, or your gender.
It's jang to do daredevil tricks and even get killed a few times … you could always come alive again.
And it's jang to try to sabotage your robot-run world.
But when the madcap chase for pleasure begins to drag and you start looking for a real life to live, you find the robots have left nothing worthwhile for you to do.
Searching for a way out of this pointless existence you make a lot of painful and stupid mistakes. But you fight your way free and you start a new life - in exile.
... and find you have to cope with sightseers and hangers-on, all uninvited and now exiled with you - and finally come face to face with the greatest and most deadly threat of all ...
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