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Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things (Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things #1-3) 
I don't want to say much more about the plot, 'cause it's a frenetic thing , puzzling at times, quirky, amusing, a carnival thrill-ride. Calder was living in Thailand when he penned it back in 1991—parked right amidst what was even then a thriving sex tourism industry—and Dead Girls includes the latter within its selected targets, while also examining the future perils of a runaway and all-catering capitalism, romantic longing and nationalistic queue-jumping, scientific god-playing with advanced, nature-nudging technology, and, leading the pack, the myriad ways in which misogyny thrives however we configure our world. The Lilim have been bred from that inky region of the male psyche where the words whore and bitch and cunt rear as hissing cobras, inveigling their poisoning spirit into these prettified Cartier dolls originally concocted in a saccharine style of Pollyanna purity and coy cupidity. Now these vampiric, nanotech-bearing succubi are wreaking their own sexual vengeance upon the world, to the degree that the alarmed governments amongst the still-powerful nations are wavering between strategies to slaughter the dolls and to come to terms with them. The need to humiliate and denigrate in order to gratify, the linkage between sexual desire and the death drive, and the strive to dominate, in both sexes, to overpower those who think they hold the whip, surface throughout; but, in the end, Calder opts to allow the story top priority, to race along even if the intriguing and troubling questions raised in the moment seem to be enveloped by the narrative's smoking tires.
And you know, that's just fine with me—because what actually works best about Dead Girls, and against the odds, really, when you consider how its tale was constructed, is the love story between childhood-robbed, teenaged exiles Iggy and Primavera. I'm a fucking sucker for a well-done, convincing work through of that grand old emotion merging two individual souls into a stronger, better, buttressed one; and, notwithstanding the punchy dialogue, splatter violence, smutty depravity, and Pow! Bam! panel-play when the novel (de)ascends to the realm of the cartoon, Calder pulls it off marvelously. Primavera is a Lilim, by its very malevolent nature incapable of love; and Iggy—whose native English society has taken to publicly executing Lilim like a modern Transylvanian mob—is a doll-junkie, addicted to the pleasures carried within the latter's neo-vampiric saliva, an amoral vagrant who led Primavera to the foul gates of murder. Yet, despite all of these character flaws and impediments, the brutal existential circumstances and environments through which they must wend, their loyalty and love is painted in hues that not only convince, but actually prove touching. I knew exactly where Calder was bringing things to seal the deal at the end of the book, what the fate for these two sorely-tried kids was going to be: and damn if, when it all came to pass as expected, I didn't resignedly shake my head and mutter Ah, you fucking bastard, Calder. And after the cavalcade of differing emotions and sensations and pleasures I had experienced in this brief-but-quite-enjoyable textual ride, closing it all with a bemused melancholy seemed somehow right. Well done, dude.
Dead Boys : I made it around thirty pages into DB before setting it aside; thicker prose, planetary transposition, nastier knuckling and naughtier nookie (or was that the other way around?)—I was liking it, but I'm feeling the pressures of limited time/unlimited books something fierce these days. I must get a handle on the stacks overflowing before my eyes, so I'm temporarily shelving Calder—I think I've the gist of the entirety, or at least enough to satisfy for the moment—until I've added a few more different and highly-desired notches to the book belt.
An erotic world of robotic vampire women named Lilim, sprung from a mechanic virus that otherwise sits docile until puberty; whose main goal in life is to protect their most valuable asset - their wombs and its attachments - and their male prey, who are either their addicted followers or ruthless hunters.
So far I've only read Dead Girls. It was great, even though the first time I read it I did not know a lot of the foreign words. I have never been a fan of Sci-fi, but this one kept my attention.

Im only about two-thirds through this one, since other books keep jumping up and yelling read me! But so far Im far enough down the rabbit hole to say that Calders trilogy is a Trevor Brown painting come to life, told through lush, decadent prose reminiscent of Ballards The Atrocity Exhibition or Burroughss The Ticket That Exploded by way of the Marquis De Sade. Not a book for the faint of heart, but if the prospect of adolescent schoolgirls transformed into vicious vampiric gynoids holds an
"Teenage Mutant Robot Vampires" is a minimalist review I've heard of this book.Dead Girls is one of those books, movies, or tv series finales that makes you feel like you've been kicked in the head and leaves you walking around in a haze for a couple of days.People usually say the sequels aren't as good and they are a step down but I think they're also just harder to understand. Information virus traveling backward through time overwriting history is a weird concept but I think Dead
Calders Dead trilogy is a Frankenstein monster made up of masturbatory fantasies about anime, serious fevered study of De Sade and Bataille, love of the baroque prose of Nabokov and Angela Carter, and fin de siecle decadence held together with cyperpunk wiring and then torn to pieces with narrative scatterbombs from Burroughs Nova trilogy and Moorcocks Cornelius Quartet. If you dont like these references, you wont like Calder.
I'm holding off on giving this book a rating as I intend to reread it. I had this book assigned for a university course in cyberpunk literature I took several years ago. I ended up reading only Dead Girls, as I had an overwhelming amount to read that quarter, but found what I did read strange, dark, and unforgettable. I don't remember much of the writing style or even the exact arc of the plot, however, many of the themes of the book have not yet left me, from the idea of female children
Richard Calder
Paperback | Pages: 400 pages Rating: 3.63 | 156 Users | 20 Reviews

Present Out Of Books Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things (Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things #1-3)
Title | : | Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things (Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things #1-3) |
Author | : | Richard Calder |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 400 pages |
Published | : | February 15th 1998 by St. Martin's Griffin (first published February 15th 1993) |
Categories | : | Science Fiction. Fiction. Horror. Fantasy. Speculative Fiction. Cyberpunk |
Narration Concering Books Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things (Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things #1-3)
Dead Girls : Adam's review does a nice job of laying out the sources for Calder's bizarre splash of rainbow mayhem—sexual, interpersonal, technological, civilizational, political, dimensional—though the prevailing ones in the opening book of the trilogy would have to be Moorcock's Cornelius and Gibson's Neuromancer, with a splash of Nabokov and hints of Bataille by-the-bye. I expected the sex to be a bit more explicit than proved to be the case, though Calder manages an assured mixture of the erotic, the comical, the enigmatic, and the disturbing in his entertaining originality, depicting a gynoid-obsessed world wherein female automatons and simulacra are endowed with nanotechnological life seemingly solely to satisfy the motley lusts of the testicle-toting divide of the global populace. This dark, leering, and rage-tinged essence has reached its apotheosis in the Lilim, the vampiric robot-grrls who incarnate the fallen state of a future Europe that, reaching back into the late eighteenth century to bring the air of decadence and aura of high culture well into the twenty-first as a marketing ploy, has been infected by this biotech version of Lilith's curse. What was the top-of-the-line in this artificial servant category—the Cartier Dolls—assumed, through the mutative wonder of quantum nature, the characteristics of a modern-day, saliva-envenomed vampire, through the latter of which were passed subatomic pathogens into the reproductive organs of all the human male partners who had succumbed to these sinful robots' übererotic allure. Subsequently, these semen-infected fathers would sire human daughters who, upon pubescence, morphed into waxy-skinned, plastic-and-steel framed, raven-tressed, emerald-eyed, needle-fanged asskickers, capable of manipulating the inherent weirdness of the Quantum world in order to work magic and oneiric will upon a simultaneously intoxicated and repulsed populace. Speaking of the latter, with one half of their offspring potentially (and growingly) doomed to dollhood, their numbers are dropping precariously, and both dolls and humans desire to flee the chaos of an interdicted Old World in order to find new avenues for existence; in the case of our teenaged protagonists—doll junkie Ignatz "Iggy" Zwakh and his girl/gynoidfriend Primavera Bobinski, who has just finished her complete transformation into a pubescent Lilim—the loud, crazed, urban pornocracy of a doll-stacked Bangkok.I don't want to say much more about the plot, 'cause it's a frenetic thing , puzzling at times, quirky, amusing, a carnival thrill-ride. Calder was living in Thailand when he penned it back in 1991—parked right amidst what was even then a thriving sex tourism industry—and Dead Girls includes the latter within its selected targets, while also examining the future perils of a runaway and all-catering capitalism, romantic longing and nationalistic queue-jumping, scientific god-playing with advanced, nature-nudging technology, and, leading the pack, the myriad ways in which misogyny thrives however we configure our world. The Lilim have been bred from that inky region of the male psyche where the words whore and bitch and cunt rear as hissing cobras, inveigling their poisoning spirit into these prettified Cartier dolls originally concocted in a saccharine style of Pollyanna purity and coy cupidity. Now these vampiric, nanotech-bearing succubi are wreaking their own sexual vengeance upon the world, to the degree that the alarmed governments amongst the still-powerful nations are wavering between strategies to slaughter the dolls and to come to terms with them. The need to humiliate and denigrate in order to gratify, the linkage between sexual desire and the death drive, and the strive to dominate, in both sexes, to overpower those who think they hold the whip, surface throughout; but, in the end, Calder opts to allow the story top priority, to race along even if the intriguing and troubling questions raised in the moment seem to be enveloped by the narrative's smoking tires.
And you know, that's just fine with me—because what actually works best about Dead Girls, and against the odds, really, when you consider how its tale was constructed, is the love story between childhood-robbed, teenaged exiles Iggy and Primavera. I'm a fucking sucker for a well-done, convincing work through of that grand old emotion merging two individual souls into a stronger, better, buttressed one; and, notwithstanding the punchy dialogue, splatter violence, smutty depravity, and Pow! Bam! panel-play when the novel (de)ascends to the realm of the cartoon, Calder pulls it off marvelously. Primavera is a Lilim, by its very malevolent nature incapable of love; and Iggy—whose native English society has taken to publicly executing Lilim like a modern Transylvanian mob—is a doll-junkie, addicted to the pleasures carried within the latter's neo-vampiric saliva, an amoral vagrant who led Primavera to the foul gates of murder. Yet, despite all of these character flaws and impediments, the brutal existential circumstances and environments through which they must wend, their loyalty and love is painted in hues that not only convince, but actually prove touching. I knew exactly where Calder was bringing things to seal the deal at the end of the book, what the fate for these two sorely-tried kids was going to be: and damn if, when it all came to pass as expected, I didn't resignedly shake my head and mutter Ah, you fucking bastard, Calder. And after the cavalcade of differing emotions and sensations and pleasures I had experienced in this brief-but-quite-enjoyable textual ride, closing it all with a bemused melancholy seemed somehow right. Well done, dude.
Dead Boys : I made it around thirty pages into DB before setting it aside; thicker prose, planetary transposition, nastier knuckling and naughtier nookie (or was that the other way around?)—I was liking it, but I'm feeling the pressures of limited time/unlimited books something fierce these days. I must get a handle on the stacks overflowing before my eyes, so I'm temporarily shelving Calder—I think I've the gist of the entirety, or at least enough to satisfy for the moment—until I've added a few more different and highly-desired notches to the book belt.
Declare Books During Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things (Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things #1-3)
Original Title: | Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things |
ISBN: | 0312180780 (ISBN13: 9780312180782) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things #1-3 |
Rating Out Of Books Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things (Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things #1-3)
Ratings: 3.63 From 156 Users | 20 ReviewsPiece Out Of Books Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things (Dead Girls, Dead Boys, Dead Things #1-3)
Dead Girls : Adam's review does a nice job of laying out the sources for Calder's bizarre splash of rainbow mayhemsexual, interpersonal, technological, civilizational, political, dimensionalthough the prevailing ones in the opening book of the trilogy would have to be Moorcock's Cornelius and Gibson's Neuromancer, with a splash of Nabokov and hints of Bataille by-the-bye. I expected the sex to be a bit more explicit than proved to be the case, though Calder manages an assured mixture of theAn erotic world of robotic vampire women named Lilim, sprung from a mechanic virus that otherwise sits docile until puberty; whose main goal in life is to protect their most valuable asset - their wombs and its attachments - and their male prey, who are either their addicted followers or ruthless hunters.
So far I've only read Dead Girls. It was great, even though the first time I read it I did not know a lot of the foreign words. I have never been a fan of Sci-fi, but this one kept my attention.

Im only about two-thirds through this one, since other books keep jumping up and yelling read me! But so far Im far enough down the rabbit hole to say that Calders trilogy is a Trevor Brown painting come to life, told through lush, decadent prose reminiscent of Ballards The Atrocity Exhibition or Burroughss The Ticket That Exploded by way of the Marquis De Sade. Not a book for the faint of heart, but if the prospect of adolescent schoolgirls transformed into vicious vampiric gynoids holds an
"Teenage Mutant Robot Vampires" is a minimalist review I've heard of this book.Dead Girls is one of those books, movies, or tv series finales that makes you feel like you've been kicked in the head and leaves you walking around in a haze for a couple of days.People usually say the sequels aren't as good and they are a step down but I think they're also just harder to understand. Information virus traveling backward through time overwriting history is a weird concept but I think Dead
Calders Dead trilogy is a Frankenstein monster made up of masturbatory fantasies about anime, serious fevered study of De Sade and Bataille, love of the baroque prose of Nabokov and Angela Carter, and fin de siecle decadence held together with cyperpunk wiring and then torn to pieces with narrative scatterbombs from Burroughs Nova trilogy and Moorcocks Cornelius Quartet. If you dont like these references, you wont like Calder.
I'm holding off on giving this book a rating as I intend to reread it. I had this book assigned for a university course in cyberpunk literature I took several years ago. I ended up reading only Dead Girls, as I had an overwhelming amount to read that quarter, but found what I did read strange, dark, and unforgettable. I don't remember much of the writing style or even the exact arc of the plot, however, many of the themes of the book have not yet left me, from the idea of female children
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