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Book Reviews of Otherland: City Of Golden Shadow (Otherland, Bk 1)

Otherland: City Of Golden Shadow (Otherland, Bk 1)
Otherland City Of Golden Shadow - Otherland, Bk 1
Author: Tad Williams
ISBN-13: 9780886777104
ISBN-10: 0886777100
Publication Date: 1997
Pages: 784
Rating:
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
 46

3.7 stars, based on 46 ratings
Publisher: DAW Hardcover
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

5 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Otherland: City Of Golden Shadow (Otherland, Bk 1) on + 17 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I liked this book. It was engrossing, vividly described and captivating. Pulled me right in
tamara avatar reviewed Otherland: City Of Golden Shadow (Otherland, Bk 1) on + 78 more book reviews
In the future, the internet is not a place accessed while sitting on a chair in front of monitor - it's a place your mind travels to, your virual reality self dressed in any number of sim personas, depending on how much you can afford to spend.

A new 'world' is shown to a few select people. A golden city that seems more real than anything they have ever seen on the net before. Each person attempts to travel to this place for his or her own personal reasons.

When discovered, it proves to be more than any of them bargained for. Virtual reality worlds, full of the amazing, the 'what ifs', the past, the future and anything you could imagine.
amichai avatar reviewed Otherland: City Of Golden Shadow (Otherland, Bk 1) on + 368 more book reviews
I read about 200 pages of the 779 pages before I stopped. Paucity of likable characters? I did like the two main ones, but they seemed suspended in an unlikable world...maybe I'm disliking cyber-fiction...
reviewed Otherland: City Of Golden Shadow (Otherland, Bk 1) on + 52 more book reviews
When Renie Sulaweyo's younger brother, Stephen, returns from the Net after visiting Mister J's, a virtual reality equivalent of the Hellfire Club, she's worried about him. When his next Net trip leaves him in a coma, Renie is terrified and angry. Soon she discovers evidence that other children have lapsed into comas under similar circumstances. A professor of computer science and an adept user of the Net, Renie retraces Stephen's trail and enters Mister J's but barely escapes with her own mind intact. After her adventure, she discovers that someone has downloaded into her computer the impossibly complex image of a fantastic golden city. Then her apartment is fire-bombed, she loses her job and another professor whom she has recruited to help her decipher the mystery is murdered. It's clear that Renie has angered someone with almost unlimited power, but she remains determined to save her brother. In the first book in what is projected to be, in effect, a single, enormous four-volume novel, Williams (Memory, Sorrow and Thorn) proves himself as adept at writing science fiction as he is at writing fantasy. His 21st-century South Africa, where blacks run the government and pursue careers but where whites control most economic power, rings true. His version of the Net, although obviously indebted to Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash and other novels, is detailed and fascinating. Best of all, however, are Williams's well-drawn, sympathetic characters, including Renie and her family, her student !Xabbu, the mysterious invalid Mister Sellars and a host of other folk, all of whom hope to solve the mystery of the terrifying VR environment called Otherland.
reviewed Otherland: City Of Golden Shadow (Otherland, Bk 1) on
This book is a set-up for the rest of the series. It is hard going at first since he has to set up each individual character. Once you get into the story you get hooked. If you haven't read the series yet a helpful hint is make sure you have the next book on hand before you finish one. The author doesn't waste time ending each book but just leave the story to continue on to the next one.