Apotheosis Contelligence Increase Cosmic Frontier Hedonism & Fun Dreams & Psi Life Extension & Immortality Spaceship Earth
  Home      Forums      Library      Media      Gallery      Glossary      Links

May 06, 2004

Milky Way Marmalade

Orange cube of gelatin contains the ultimate knowledge of the universe

I discovered this book and review via Reality Carnival.

An orange cube of gelatin contains the ultimate knowledge of the universe. Called L'Orange, or the Akashic Records, or the Philosopher's Stone, or the Universal Hologram, and so on, it contains the past, present and future of all things. In the year 3265, Trinesmart Quark, II, a "procurer" of exotic foods, travels the universe in pursuit of his trade, until he tires of killing exotics merely for the satisfaction of the extremely wealthy and indulged. Soon he finds himself in pursuit of L'Orange and engaged in a surreal adventure.

Floating in the vastness of space, Caffrey discovers an ancient jukebox and recovers the sound of 20th century music. Living in a time when music no longer exists, Caffey finds that rock and roll speaks to his soul. His new passion lends new purpose to his life and he retires from procurement to spend his life on 20th century earth. But soon the android Poe 33, Portsmith to L'Orange finds him and ask for help. Suspiciously separated from L'Orange, Poe 33 needs Quark to help him before another entity can capture L'Orange and gain ultimate domination of the universe.

Author Michael DiCerto pens a novel that combines the outrageous fun of Hitchiker's Guide To The Galaxy and Monty Python with the search for cosmic meaning. Exotic imaginings and bizarre adventure lend Milky Way Marmalade an irresistible appeal with its whimsical and outrageous style. Science fiction fans will discover DiCerto's gift of fabulous characterizations and wicked plotting lends a dynamic freshness to the genre. With rich nuances that become at once spiritual and satirical, Milky Way Marmalade belongs on the keeper shelf. Very highly recommended.

Posted by Bennu at May 6, 2004 11:01 PM | TrackBack
Comments

This book is a riot. Sooooo funny yet poignant

Posted by: Mike at May 11, 2004 05:17 AM