Reviews

The Courier's New Bicycle by Kim Westwood

kcfromaustcrime's review

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3.0

Not being one for speculative fiction, this isn't a book that I would have sought out, even with its cross-genre aspects. However, THE COURIER'S NEW BICYCLE was being talked about a lot by my fellow Sisters in Crime and, I'm not completely opposed to the occasional foray outside my comfort zone, so all in all the recommendations seemed like a good enough reason to try it out.

It did take a little while to work out the style of the book. Westwood has developed a laid back, ironic, almost gentle sort of a style which initially doesn't quite seem to gel with many aspects of the story. It actually took a little while to grasp how important many of the sub-texts of this story are because of the style. Particularly, as this is not a book that has a happy outlook for our futures. It's profoundly disturbing to think about the lengths that people will go to in their pursuit of personal gratification - in this case post a pandemic that has rendered a large proportion of the population sterile making fertility treatment the new "must have". That "must have" is pursued ethically and unethically, despite the mindless dogma of the religious zealots in charge of government; despite the breathtaking cruelty to other species.

In this world Salisbury Forth, gender transgressive, courier of contraband hormones, is a protagonist with issues unique to this particular time and setting. An activist working to free animals from the cruelty hormone factory farms, Sal is also trying to find love, stay alive in a dangerous place, avoid the worst excesses of the religious oppression of the "other", and keep hearth and home safe. It's almost like Sal has set out to become the ultimate target - flying in the face of the rules and norms of gender, the keeping of certain pet animals, owning a bicycle, working as a courier of contraband hormones (the ethical kind), fighting the source of the unethical kind.

It was also rather surprising to find a bicycle almost a character in the book. In Westwood's future Melbourne a bicycle is a highly sought after article. Sal's love for, and reliance on that bicycle was a palpable and meaningful part of who Sal is.

There is a lot going on in THE COURIER'S NEW BICYCLE, and perhaps it was the slightly laid-back style, but in the early parts of the book I did struggle quite a lot to engage, and to keep up with the unexpectedness, the other-worldliness of the entire world that Westwood is building. As I got a handle on the style, and the breadth of the issues being covered revealed themselves, everything started to work a lot better. For readers who prefer crime / mystery fiction, there is a traditional mystery element to this book, but really, the main point is the view of future Melbourne, the building of an entire world in which human activities happen - life, love, partnership, hate, killing - the whole gamut. Twisted to suit the time and the place and particular circumstances. All of which built people and a place that were often fascinating, not always particularly likeable.

If absolutely nothing else was achieved by reading THE COURIER'S NEW BICYCLE (and that's not accurate), it's a book that certainly made me glad to be on the old woman side of life. As this book describes a future world that I'd want absolutely no part of, I was profoundly relieved to realise I'd be unlikely to live long enough to have to. Which says a lot about the experience of the book.

scottishben's review

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5.0

If you dont live in Australia then you either need a lot of luck, have Aussie connections or go to quite a bit of effort to get a copy of this but if you do you will be very glad you did.

It makes no sense to me at all why this is not available at least as an ebook outside of Australia. I would say this is one of the most important and effective SF books in the last decade. It is a lot of fun, its accessible and it has plenty of fresh ideas.

A few small critisisms dropped it a star but this is an exceptional read.

aceymtaylor's review

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5.0

Set in future Melbourne with an androgynous lead character with lesbian sex. It is AWESOME :D

rivqa's review

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4.0

I wasn't sure I was going to like this at first, but then I did, and then suddenly it was done. A beautiful, thought-provoking book.

alextheunicorn's review

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5.0

Set in future Melbourne with an androgynous lead character with lesbian sex. It is AWESOME :D

celiaedf12's review

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4.0

I got a copy of this science fiction novel set in Melbourne after hearing about it on Galactic Suburbia (I now have a "Galactic Suburbia" tag for books that fit into this category) and enjoyed it very much. Westwood envisions a dark, oppressive future, where a virus has drastically reduced fertility rates, and created a thriving black market in hormones. Salisbury Forth is a bicycle courier for one of the ethical hormone companies, and when dodgy hormones start turning up on the street purporting to be from her employer, she goes into detective mode.

It wasn't so much the mystery element of this story I enjoyed as the entire world Westwood has created, the character of Salisbury and her "family" she has created of those mostly on the outskirts of the narrow limits society now deems to be acceptable. A wonderfully enjoyable book.

alanbaxter's review

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4.0

You can find my review of this one here:

The Courier’s New Bicycle by Kim Westwood – review: http://bit.ly/scgKM3
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