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Paperback Triton Book

ISBN: 0553126806

ISBN13: 9780553126808

Triton

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Book Overview

Interplanetary war, capture and escape, diplomatic intrigues that topple worlds.In a story as exciting as any science fiction adventure written, Samuel R. Delany's 1976 SF novel, originally published... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great novel!

This is a hell of a good book. Reading it a second time through, I was most impressed by Delaney's subtle irony--Triton is an itnensely comic novel. But it's also a profound interrogation of gender. Delaney's important, and Triton is a great read.

A different view.

A book is a machine to generate interpretations, as Eco wrote. Thus, not one interpretation can be the correct one, and all we can do is to add to what other people have experienced at some point while reading a book.Due to my own life experience, I perceive, perhaps, several more levels to this novel. The first time I read it, about 20 years ago, I was 10 and didn't understand many of the subtleties. However, the fact that the main character was so out of touch with the reality around him and that he had failed miserably to adapt to his changing surroundings, and, in the end, finds a "way out" for all the wrong reasons, made me think.And think hard.This book forced me to re-examine my own motivations several years later, because, besides the humour (sometimes even mockery) of our current socio-political systems, the book has a point. Bron Helmstron, the main character, becomes a woman not because he feels he's one, but because he wants to please the image of women she had as a man. He becomes a woman created from an intellectual male psyche.Of course the issue of gender is at the core of the novel. Adaptation, sexism (Bron is perhaps the last old-mindset sexist in this heterotopic future) and monosexism -that is, the loving yourself as a projection but in a different gender role.I asked myself many questions after re-reading this book at 22 (I'm a male-to-female transsexual): what are my motivations? I'm doing this as a rebellion against the rigidity of gender in our society? Am I doing this because I'm so selfish I've fallen in love with my own image in a different gender-role? Am I doing this out of selfishness, or because I've failed adapting myself to the world? Or because I'm so utterly sexist that, by adhering to the stereotype of what femineity should be, I am trying to put order to my own world?This is one of my "top ten" books of all times. It made me grow as a person, and discover in myself that, unlike Bron, I was going through this route because I wanted to be honest with myself, not out of selfishness or emotional laziness.Highly recommended if you don't mind some pretentiousness and have an open mind -and some background on feminist theory wouldn't hurt.

another masterpiece by SRD

In reading all the customer reviews of Trouble On Triton, both negative and positive, what I found most lacking was any mention of humor. This book is a wonderful, and yes, hilarious, satire of hetero-centricism (if there is such a word). It is a must read for anyone interested in any of the following topics: art and criticism, sex and gender, science fiction. Delany is very good at facing us with our own closed minds. He stands out as one of the most talented writers in English today.

Brilliant intellectual satire in SF guise

Trouble on Triton (as it is now retitled--the publisher just called the first edition "Triton,") is one of the finest SF novels ever written. It is also one of the best books on the 1960s ever written, though it is supposedly set much later. Delany uses the semi-utopian setting to convey much of the spirit of the East Village in New York during the sixties, when he played with a band, lived in a commune, had much experimental sex and generally found himself. See Heavenly Breakfast or The Motion of Light in Water to understand the autobiographical background to Trouble on Triton. He creates an extremely unsympathetic protagonist who is ill at ease in a libertarian utopia because he is by natural instinct an uptight conservative who's at a loss in a world where self-definitions vary wildly.This is also from the period when Delany was first becoming profoundly influenced by modern poststructuralist philosophy, and he tries to weave certain ideas (not entirely successfully) into the novel. This is a very, very intellectual book--not at all an easy read. But if you can enjoy a satire on white male piggishness written by a gay black genius, you'll enjoy this book. It's never gotten the audience it deserves because its ideal readers tend to be people who scorn to pick up an SF novel,particularly one with such a deliberately (and mockinglly) cheesy title as Trouble on Triton.

My first intro to Delany - loved it, and will re-read.

It seems with Delany that you either understand him, and he becomes your favorite author, or you completely don't get it and are repulsed by all of his works. This was the first book I read by Delany -- since them I've read Dhalgren (what an awesome book) and the Neveryona series, and a bunch of his earlier works. The setting, Triton, was both believable and extremely surreal. The main character, though somewhat shallow... is absolutely fascinating and fascinatingly dense. This book is full of political, social, sexual and scientific commentary (as with all his later works)... I don't know what it was about it, but I personally couldn't put it down and stayed up all night reading it, and can't wait to re-read it. This is a beautiful and fascinating work, but not for everyone.
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