- The last man - Margaret ATWOOD Michèle ALBARET-MAATSCH - Books

Categories


  • Languishing and long  

    The Last Man (Paperback)
    There was enough to make this a new story, but 470 pages is too much, especially since the style is very relaxed and without interest. There is little invention in terms of SF (ideas are commonplace, even in the past, such as fax or CD-ROM), are freq
  • critical modern world but lack of emotions  

    The Last Man (Paperback)
    In a post apocalyptic world, Snowman (formerly Jimmy) trying to survive in the company of Crakers, humans genetically created. The story is shared between this Snowman and his past with his best friend Crake and the woman he loves, Oryx. It is a SF n
  • Excellent novel pessimistic wish  

    The Last Man (Paperback)
    It does not come out unscathed from this story we eats from the first to the last page. We witness as a witness hallucinated at the end of a world whose values ​​have lowered the human being to a mere market value. The characters are, as usual with M
  • a bit creepy  

    The Last Man (Paperback)
    A write not very sought after, a topic not too dug in while just sketched characters. But not unpleasant to pass the time.
  • Prodigious  

    The Last Man (Paperback)
    This is a book for which I regret that no more than five stars ... This unclassifiable novel combines engineering with anticipation, philosophy, adventure, love, friendship (and I certainly forget!), All with a humor that strongly colored the mood de
  • a new Noah  

    The Last Man (Paperback)
    We find in this novel themes dear to many fictions: the theme of "Survivor" (many futuristic novels), the theme of human pride, who dreams of being God, both in its power creation, but also in its extermination power. As Noah, our hero has only