This is a very,
very special treat: an extremely flattering review of
Technorotica: Stories Shattering the Ultimate Taboo - a print-only special edition, made up of the
Rude Mechanicals and
Better Than The Real Thing ebooks, all published (by the very great Renaisssance E Books/Sizzler Editions) by the always-great
Lisabet Sarai.
Thanks so much, Lisabet!
Technorotica: Stories Shattering the Ultimate Taboo by M. Christian
Barbary Coast Editions, Renaissance E Books, 2012
One
of the most enjoyable aspects of being an author is that you get to
invent new worlds. Sometimes those worlds strongly resemble our
so-called reality; sometimes they deviate wildly. Even the most bizarre
fictional world, though, needs to feel real. The reader needs to see,
smell, taste, and touch the alien environment in which she finds
herself. Against all logic and common sense knowledge, she needs to
believe.
Pulling this off is tough,
especially in genres like paranormal and science fiction, where the
story by definition is set somewhere other than the world as we know it.
M. Christian is a master of this trick, as he demonstrates in
Technorotica, his new collection of stories concerning the erotic
connections between humans and machines.
I'll admit up front that I've long been a fan of M.Christian's work (I even edited one of his books, ComingTogether Presents M. Christian)
and that I'm deeply in awe of his imagination. Despite what might be
considered a positive bias, I still feel totally comfortable and
justified in asserting: this is a fantastic book, in both the literal
and figurative sense.
The stories in
this collection could loosely be called science fiction erotica, but
they vary a great deal in focus and tone. Several of them (“Hot
Definition”, “Speaking Parts”, “Hack Work” and the excerpt from
Christian's novel Painted Doll) are set in a shadowy, perilous,
cyber-punk world where everything is for sale and everyone lives on the
edge, staying alive through crime or luck or sometimes both.
Prosthetics, holographic doppelgangers, constant electronic
surveillance, mind-jacking and body snatching – fans of Gibson, Sterling
and Cadigan will feel right at home. However, this author isn't
primarily concerned with gadgets and technology (never mind the title of
the book) but with feelings: fear, hunger, desperation, desire and
love. These stories explore how humans reach out for one another, as the
mechanical invades and erodes the meaning of humanity.
“Blow
Up” and “I am Jo's Vibrator” are lighter in tone. The former lets us
into the mind of a man with a peculiar fetish. The latter, as suggested
by the title, is narrated by a sex toy. Both will make you smile (or at
least, that was my reaction) though “Blow Up”, the first tale in the
book, has a subtle darkness that's a preview of the more serious stories
to come.
I've read the tale “State” in
several other M. Christian collections. It remains one of my favorite
erotic stories of all time. A human woman/sex worker impersonates a
blue-skinned, state-of-the-art Japanese sex robot. The neat logical flip
here satisfies the intellect. The woman's arousal at becoming the
ultimate sex object provides satisfaction in other dimensions.
“The
Bell House Invitation” is a fabulous new take on ménage, or more
accurately, polyamory. Four individuals – two men, two women – live
together and share a group mind. Together they seduce another woman with
the aim of convincing her to join their communal consciousness. The sex
scene in this tale succeeds in exploring all the participants'
experience simultaneously, pulling the reader into the mix. It's
lusciously explicit without losing the sense of wonder that derives from
a level of communion most of us only dream about.
In
contrast, “Billie” includes no overt sex at all yet still manages to
convey an intense feeling of desire. This vignette of a butch woman
speeding along the Pacific Coast Highway on her vintage 1977 Harley
Davidson details a synergy between human and machine so strong it
becomes erotic.
“A Light Minute” focuses
on communication over a distance, as a reclusive woman terrified of the
world outside opens herself to the lover she knows only via electronic
missives.
Finally, “KSRN” is a
dream-like reverie about speed and sex, chrome and compassion. If I'd
been the author, I would have put this story last in the book. It leaves
you feeling haunted and yet somehow complete.
Overall, my
reaction to this book was “Wow”. But then, I'm seriously turned on by
originality. If you share this trait with me – get yourself a copy of
Technorotica.
(And by the way - the book includes a great preface and afterword, too!)
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