Beggars in Spain Audiobook By Nancy Kress cover art

Beggars in Spain

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Beggars in Spain

By: Nancy Kress
Narrated by: Cassandra Campbell
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Nebula Award Winner, Novella, 1991

In a world where the slightest edge can mean the difference between success and failure, Leisha Camden is beautiful, extraordinarily intelligent, and one of a growing number of human beings who have been genetically modified to never require sleep.

Once considered interesting anomalies, now Leisha and the other "Sleepless" are outcasts, victims of blind hatred, political repression, and shocking mob violence meant to drive them from human society and, ultimately, from Earth itself.

But Leisha Camden has chosen to remain behind in a world that envies and fears her "gift," a world marked for destruction by a deadly conspiracy of freedom and revenge.

©1993 Nancy Kress (P)2009 Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Fantasy Science Fiction Fiction Thought-Provoking

Critic reviews

"Superb....An exquisite saga of biological advantages." ( Denver Post)
"A depth of imagination unusual even among science fiction writers." ( Analog)
"[T]hrilling drama, compelling dialectic." ( Kirkus Reviews)
Thought-provoking Premise • Complex Characters • Engaging Plot • Creative Worldbuilding • Unique Concept

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This was a very listenable audiobook with some interesting ideas. It certainly held my attention and kept me involved. At the same time, it constantly seemed to be channeling other, similar books. Most frequently, "Atlas Shrugged", with many long-winded and somewhat repetitive passages about makers and takers, in the one-dimensionality of many of the characters, and in the (SPOILER?) decision of the makers to separate themselves (unlike Ayn Rand's, however, Kress does not seem to making a political statement with one "side" clearly in the right; this is a much more balanced examination of the societal split). Then we have similarities to Ender's Game, and other books about super children. And other similarities that have drifted from my mind... sorority stories? Animal Farm?

And yet it remains readable and enjoyable. The premise is interesting. I often wished that the author had limited the extra abilities of the sleepless to just not sleeping, and gone into more detail about that. I mean, the brief touching upon parents who couldn't deal with babies that never slept was a glimpse into what could have been a really fascinating exploration; and I would have liked to see more of the psychological effects on adults of not sleeping - of no downtime, of no escape, of solitary nights, etc. In the book it's pretty much all up side, and augmented by several other "super powers"... I'd rather have seen more detail and more realistic balance of benefits and deficits of sleeplessness.





Good, recommended, though at times iffy!

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Such a philosophical study in the individual and the specific and the speed of change.

Kress is always great

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Good book, very forward thinking. A little slow in some parts but overall a good thought provoking book.

The pass of time and changes in society

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I think that authors use chapters to allow themselves and their readers a chance to dwell on a cliff edge or contemplate recent events. This reading steps all over that sacred space. As for content-maybe a low-key Ayn Rand except Kress seems more human.

Chapter breaks

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The first part is great, but the court room dialog can get quite tedious in the second part.

Mostly very good

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