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Super Extra Grande

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

DESCRIPTION

With the playfulness and ingenuity of Douglas Adams, the Cuban science-fiction master Yoss delivers a space opera of intergalactic proportions with Super Extra Grande, the winner of the twentieth annual UPC Science Fiction Award in 2011.

In a distant future in which Latin Americans have pioneered faster-than-light space travel, Dr. Jan Amos Sangan Dongo has a job with large and unusual responsibilities: he's a veterinarian who specializes in treating enormous alien animals. Mountain-sized amoebas, multisex species with bizarre reproductive processes, razor-nailed, carnivorous humanoid hunters: Dr. Sangan has seen it all. When a colonial conflict threatens the fragile peace between the galaxy's seven intelligent species, he must embark on a daring mission through the insides of a gigantic creature and find two swallowed ambassadors—who also happen to be his competing love interests.

Funny, witty, raunchy, and irrepressibly vivacious, Super Extra Grande is a rare specimen in the richly parodic tradition of Cuban science fiction, and could only have been written by a Cuban heavy-metal rock star with a biology degree: the inimitable Yoss.

PRAISE FOR YOSS

"One of the most prestigious science fiction authors of the island."

—On Cuba Magazine

"A gifted and daring writer."

—David Iaconangelo

"José Miguel Sánchez [Yoss] is Cuba's most decorated science fiction author, who has cultivated the most prestige for this genre in the mainstream, and the only person of all the Island's residents who lives by his pen."

—Cuenta Regresiva

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Born José Miguel Sánchez Gómez, Yoss assumed his pen name in 1988, when he won the Premio David in the science fiction category for Timshel. Together with his peculiar pseudonym, the author's aesthetic of an impentinent rocker has allowed him to stand out amongst his fellow Cuban writers. Earning a degree in Biology in 1991, he went on to graduate from the first ever course on Narrative Techniques at the Onelio Jorge Cardoso Center of Literary Training, in the year 1999. Today, Yoss writes both realistic and science fiction works. Alongside these novels, the author produces essays, reviews, and compilations, and actively promotes the Cuban science fiction literary workshops, Espiral and Espacio Abierto.

ABOUT THE TRANSLATOR

When he isn't translating, David Frye teaches Latin American culture and society at the University of Michigan. Translations include First New Chronicle and Good Government by Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayala (Peru, 1615); The Mangy Parrot by José Joaquín Fernandez de Lizardi (Mexico, 1816), for which he received a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship; Writing across Cultures: Narrative Transculturation in Latin America by Ángel Rama (Uruguay, 1982); and several Cuban and Spanish novels and poems.

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    • Kirkus

      Starred review from June 1, 2016
      A lighthearted space-opera adventure by Cuban author Yoss (A Planet for Rent, 2015, etc.).At 7 feet and 11 inches tall, Dr. Jan Amos Sangan Dongo is a very large man. He's not handicapped by his size, though. In fact, he's made it his livelihood, using it to become the "Veterinarian to the Giants." Dr. Sangan treats enormous animals throughout the galaxy, whether he's operating on 20-meter-wide cave-dwelling crustaceans called Grendels or walking around inside a 3-kilometer-long sea worm known as a Tsunami. So, when an amoeba that's 200 kilometers wide swallows two ambassadors, he's the only man who can save them. The ambassadors are the key to preserving a fragile peace in part of the galaxy--and they also both happen to be Dr. Sangan's love interests. This novel's madcap tone is very similar to Douglas Adams'--so much so that it's almost impossible to avoid drawing such comparisons (although Adams didn't joke about oral sex with aliens, as Yoss does here). As in Adams' works, the galaxy's species are terrifically alien, sporting six breasts and no teeth or breathing methane instead of oxygen. There are also lots of fun references and wordplay throughout the book: the giant amoebas, for example, live on planet Brobdingnag, which orbits a star called Swift-3, while Jan Amos Sangan Dongo is a riff on sangandongo, Cuban slang for "really big." But possibly the most enjoyable aspect of this strange world is that it takes place in a future in which an Ecuadorean Jesuit priest discovers faster-than-light travel, and the first space flight proving his theory is announced by unfurling a banner on Mars that reads "Suck on this, dumb-ass gringos!" Also, the lingua franca of this future is Spanglish, and all the dialogue appealingly follows suit: "el amor--don't we know it bien!--goes beyond lo fisico, even lo quimico. Far beyond." An exceptionally enjoyable comic tale set in a fully realized, firmly science-fictional universe.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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