Sunburst
by Phyllis Gotlieb
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A nuclear accident ravages a small town outside of Chicago, resulting in a government quarantine isolating it from the rest of the world. A generation later, with the quarantine still in place, strange mutations have affected the minds of the town's children -- mutations which could either spell the next stage in human evolution, or something far more sinister. As the children's psychic powers begin to manifest themselves in more demented and destructive forms, the kids escape their show more compound. Now it is up to Shandy Johnson and her friends to track down the runaways. Possessing similar powers, Sandy and her friends find themselves facing increasingly frightening confrontations with their escaped peers. First published in 1964 and again in 1978, Sunburst has lost neither its edge nor its relevance. Predating the near-misses and disasters at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl, Gotlieb reminds us of the tremendous forces we have at our fingertips -- powers that humans use daily but do not fully comprehend. show lessTags
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2/5
A muddled and messy showing from Gotlieb. Sunburst takes place after some sort of nuclear disaster, where radiation has killed off a lot of the older generation, whose surviving children are sometimes left with latent psychic, teleportation, or other superhero powers. These children are rounded up by a government-esque group that locks them in a force field where they can't escape. Shandy, a child that is immune to psychic powers, is eventually rounded up by the government and taken to the facilitate, where she tries to understand her place in freeing the tortured group of children.
If Gotlieb does something well, it's writing characters with emotion. The children in this story are very much people with valid concerns and believable show more emotions. Certainly for the time, Gotlieb also writes women well, and portrays youth as persons capable of immense mental and emotional strength.
Unfortunately, Gotlieb does a lot more telling than showing. There are many sections of lengthy exposition where the history of the world, the way that powers work, and the government agency are all explained dryly. The limited amount of action that's written here is a jumbled mess that's both confusing and off putting. The prose is at best passable, with no real sense of mastery or artistry to the writing. Overall it just feels like it was written by an amateur.
What's really cringey though is the horribly outdated sociology/psychology that Gotlieb uses as an explanation for why children and delinquents are the only ones to have psi powers:
"Their minds are organized more primitively".
"Most come from families without very strong morals - often immigrants".
"I think these kinds of shirtless helpless people could be a cause of poverty too."
Yeesh. Sort of out of the blue, Gotlieb starts having her main character, a child, go on long expositional diatribes about what a nuisance these kids are, and how their minds are close to that of animals. I don't know if mental illness was really thought of this way in the 60's, but Jesus, even if it was this ages so poorly as to be almost comical. Regardless of the few positive qualities in Sunburst, this turn towards the end of the novel casts a dim shadow over my opinion of it.
Mediocre, forgettable, and sometimes distasteful. I'm glad I only paid a dollar for it, and back to some used bookstore's stack of pulp paperbacks it will go. show less
A muddled and messy showing from Gotlieb. Sunburst takes place after some sort of nuclear disaster, where radiation has killed off a lot of the older generation, whose surviving children are sometimes left with latent psychic, teleportation, or other superhero powers. These children are rounded up by a government-esque group that locks them in a force field where they can't escape. Shandy, a child that is immune to psychic powers, is eventually rounded up by the government and taken to the facilitate, where she tries to understand her place in freeing the tortured group of children.
If Gotlieb does something well, it's writing characters with emotion. The children in this story are very much people with valid concerns and believable show more emotions. Certainly for the time, Gotlieb also writes women well, and portrays youth as persons capable of immense mental and emotional strength.
Unfortunately, Gotlieb does a lot more telling than showing. There are many sections of lengthy exposition where the history of the world, the way that powers work, and the government agency are all explained dryly. The limited amount of action that's written here is a jumbled mess that's both confusing and off putting. The prose is at best passable, with no real sense of mastery or artistry to the writing. Overall it just feels like it was written by an amateur.
What's really cringey though is the horribly outdated sociology/psychology that Gotlieb uses as an explanation for why children and delinquents are the only ones to have psi powers:
"Their minds are organized more primitively".
"Most come from families without very strong morals - often immigrants".
"I think these kinds of shirtless helpless people could be a cause of poverty too."
Yeesh. Sort of out of the blue, Gotlieb starts having her main character, a child, go on long expositional diatribes about what a nuisance these kids are, and how their minds are close to that of animals. I don't know if mental illness was really thought of this way in the 60's, but Jesus, even if it was this ages so poorly as to be almost comical. Regardless of the few positive qualities in Sunburst, this turn towards the end of the novel casts a dim shadow over my opinion of it.
Mediocre, forgettable, and sometimes distasteful. I'm glad I only paid a dollar for it, and back to some used bookstore's stack of pulp paperbacks it will go. show less
This is the first science fiction book I every read. During my Senior year in high school, a friend loaned me her copy. I was hooked! I had never been a reader of fiction, non fiction was my thing. Image my delight in discovering that there was a science fiction section in my local library! Every time I read this book it delights me.
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- Canonical title
- Sunburst
- Original title
- Sunburst
- Original publication date
- 1964
- Original language*
- Englisch
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- 146
- Popularity
- 223,476
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (2.82)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 10
- ASINs
- 20





























































