Ammonite (novel)
File:Nicola Griffith - Ammonite.jpeg | |
Author | Nicola Griffith |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Science fiction novel |
Publisher | Del Rey |
Publication date
|
December 23, 1992 |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Pages | 360 pp |
ISBN | 978-0-345-37891-0 |
OCLC | 27296707 |
LC Class | PS3557.R48935 A8 1993 |
Ammonite is Nicola Griffith's first novel, published in 1992 (ISBN 978-0-345-37891-0). It won both the Lambda Literary Award for LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) fiction, and the James Tiptree, Jr. Award for science fiction or fantasy that explores or expands our understanding of gender.
Plot summary
Ammonite is the story of Marghe Taishan, an employee of the sinister, monolithic 'Company', sent to the planet GP (Gershom's Planet- pronounced 'Jeep') as an anthropologist. The distinctive feature of Jeep is an endemic disease which kills all men (and some women) who contract it. While testing a vaccine made to protect unexposed people form the virus, Marghe makes a journey across Jeep, living with many of its indigenous cultures. She is enslaved by the nomadic Echraide, and then reaches the quieter village of Ollfoss, where she joins a family, learns the mystic discipline of linking, and eventually becomes a 'viajera', or traveling wise woman, giving up the vaccine in favor of accepting the virus into her body and truly learning what it is like to be a native. Afterward, she is forced to the center of a conflict between her former people, the Mirrors, with their native allies and the Echraide, who follow a member of their tribe whom they believe to be the Death God- Uaithne, possibly experiencing psychosis. Marghe wins peace for all as the Mirror's guard ship is blown out of the sky by the Company, who believe the vaccine has failed.
Adaptation to life on Jeep appears to be a greater theme of Griffith's novel, as not only Marghe, but other Company personnel, also eventually are forced to settle on Jeep and adapt to the cultures that its prior colonists have created, in order to adjust to the planetary environment.
Awards
References
External links
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- Pages with broken file links
- 1992 novels
- 1990s science fiction novels
- British science fiction novels
- Feminist science fiction novels
- James Tiptree, Jr. Award-winning works
- Novels by Nicola Griffith
- Single-sex worlds
- Debut novels
- Lambda Literary Award-winning works
- LGBT speculative fiction novels
- Del Rey books
- 1990s science fiction novel stubs