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A reporter in Rome investigates a personality-exchange store run by people from another world. Don't really need the foreign language you learned as a child? Swap it for more courage. But all sales are final. The store owner belongs to a race of advanced cats.

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5 reviews
What do you get when you mix a half-finished Alfred Bester novel with the work of Roger Zelazny? In this case, you get something that is almost Philip K. Dick. Almost, but not quite.

After Bester’s death, Zelazny was offered the opportunity to finish Bester’s unfinished novel. The result is Psychoshop. As research for a potential article, Alf winds up visiting a quintessential “pawn shop” – the type that shows up in every fantasy/science fiction/Twilight Zone you can imagine. However, this one (surprise!) is very different. The proprietor – Adam Maser – actually trades with people for their characteristics. The shop is outside of time and people arrive by wishing to get rid of their maladies. The first thing this lays the show more groundwork for is providing the reader with strange manipulations of people toward greater success (e.g. rather than making Edgar Allan Poe asthmatic wheeze go way, Maser helps him understand the language it is speaking.) In fact, as I began reading, I was afraid the story would be nothing but a strung together set of tales. However, the greater story does take over - the gathering of attributes (through trade) for a being who wants to create the ultimate person. (With an end of the world type foreboding thrown in - did I mention that they need 666 parts?) I’ll also mention that Maser is actually derived from cats, and that Alf’s love interest is from a snake line, and you begin to understand the wacky aspects that are coming together in this novel.

The story is entertaining and there are twists and turns and new ideas aplenty. At times, the entire thing gets a little talky. (Just my perception, but I wonder if this is Zelazny’s contribution as his writing can get that way sometimes and it may have been the only way to tie some of the pieces together. I’m just guessing.) And, as befits a novel that was written by two people who couldn’t talk to each other, it can get slightly disjointed. However, it is mostly a fun read with a compelling story, and, as I’ve said before, there are enough bizarre ideas to make it worth the time. It is not the best of Bester, it is not the best of Zelazny, and it not the best of Philip K. Dick. But it is definitely not a waste of time.
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½
Life is just too short.

Let's be completely honest: we all pick up books for various reasons. A recommendation from a trusted friend. It was up front in the airport bookshop. Written by a favorite author. A great cover.

I picked up Psychoshop because it was written by Alfred Bester. I was at Powell's in Portland, and it seemed like a good find. A classic author, a previously unread title, and a giant bookstore.

A win, right?

Perhaps for some. For me, time is too precious and life is too short.

Psychoshop was left unfinished by Bester on his death and was finished by Roger Zelazny, another classic science fiction writer. Comparing the work to a jazz duet, Greg Bear says in an introduction that the book is "Brisk, fast, memorable, a rare show more improvisational duet from two of our best[,]" but to be honest, I just couldn't get through it. As creative as it is, and it is, I just found it schizophrenic and undefined, a story looking for a conflict to be resolved. show less
Entertaining, but odd, very odd, story about a magic shop that sells anything that's just what's needed by folks when they need it, sort of. Zelazny finished what Bester had started. It's worth reading as a curiosity, but is far from either author's best works.
Quirky and a bit funny at times, this book reminded me of Twlight Zone episodes "Wong's Lost and Found Emporium" and "The Mind of Simon Foster." I liked the interactions between Glory, Alf, Adam and the patrons - especially the one whose vocal inflections inspired Beethoven to compose his fifth symphony.
A very nice blend: This book blended the two author's styles nicely. It was a lot of fun on the second read, trying to pick which part was written by whom. The fight scenes were pure Zelazny. Wonderfully crafted by a skilled fencer & Aikidoist.

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96+ Works 17,353 Members
Picture of author.
337+ Works 72,574 Members
Roger Zelazny was born in Euclid, Ohio on May 13, 1937. After receiving a B.A. from Case Western Reserve University and a M.A. from Columbia University, he began publishing science fiction stories in 1962. He received six Hugo awards, three Nebula awards including one in 1966 for And Call Me Conrad and 2 Locus awards. He died of kidney failure show more secondary to colorectal cancer on June 14, 1995. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Some Editions

Bayart, Pierre (Traduction)
Bear, Greg (Introduction)
Emerich, Bernadette (Traduction)
Gaffney, Evan (Cover artist)

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1998
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Science Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3552 .E796 .P78Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
508
Popularity
58,902
Reviews
5
Rating
½ (3.35)
Languages
English, French, Italian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3
ASINs
3