Reviews

Agents of Dreamland by Caitlín R. Kiernan

dantastic's review

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4.0

A government agent called The Signalman has a meeting with a mysterious woman in Winslow, Arizona about a bizarre cult murder near the Salton Sea days earlier. But what do those events have to do with the New Horizons space probe and a black and white movie penned by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Despite my resolve to take on as few ARCs as possible this year, I couldn't resist this one when it popped up on Netgalley. It sounded wonderfully bizarre and it was.

Much like half of the books I've read so far in 2017, Agents of Dreamland is a modern Lovecraft tale of sorts, a tale of madness, alien fungus, shady government dealings, and an apocalypse on the horizon. There are a ton of ideas and hints in this novella, enough to fuel my imagination long after I finished it.

The Signalman is just a few years from retirement and fighting for every inch in that direction. Immacolata is a mysterious woman who knows many things she shouldn't. When she gives the Signalman her briefcase, his life gets several shades worse. The Fungi from Yuggoth are one of my favorite Lovecraftian baddies and they probably don't get enough press. Agents of Dreamland pushes them to their full potential, making for a chilling read.

Since it's a novella, I don't want to say much more. Suffice to say, Agents of Dreamland is a gripping read that blends Lovecraftian lore with conspiracy theories into a slick package brimming with ideas. 4.5 out of 5 stars.

ellekiriel's review

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dark mysterious fast-paced

3.75

Solid science fiction and a well written short read. 

daxong11's review against another edition

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3.0

Amazing tone and prose, but doesn’t quite feel like a completed story.

desert_side_notched's review

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mysterious

3.0

sanjpreads's review against another edition

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3.0

this was required reading for my weird fiction class and it really was weird but also really interesting.

jervonyc's review against another edition

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5.0

Holy shit, this was awesome. Only wish it wasn't so short; would've loved another few hundred pages of this story.

pecarr's review against another edition

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3.0

While enjoyable I wish it was longer, if I’m being honest. The world building was interesting but I feel we didn’t get enough time with the characters. I know this was all most likely intentional given how short it was but I can’t help feeling that some additional character work or delving more into what the “baddie” was doing could have been so much fun.
Black helicopters already seems to fix some of those issues with its length but we will see how it all plays out.

rockwell_books's review against another edition

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3.0

NOTA: 3'5/5

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Agentes de Dreamland es una novela corta escrita por la irlandesa Caitlín R. Kiernan en 2017, nominada al Bram Stocker Award del mismo año y al Locus Award de 2018. Siendo para mí una autora desconocida (apenas hay traducciones de sus obras al castellano, siendo la más reciente "La joven ahogada", editada por Valdemar en 2014), es bastante prolífica. Ha escrito novela, relatos cortos, guionizado cómic e incluso novelizado el guión de la película de Robert Zemeckis, Beowulf.

La historia que nos compete nos lleva al sud de EE.UU., a un caluroso día en Winslow (Arizona), donde el agente gubernamental, conocido por el apodo del Guardagujas, espera reunirse con la misteriosa agente de Y, Immacolata Sexton, para un intercambio de información. Por otro lado, una joven ex-drogadicta nos explica como Drew, líder de la secta de los Hijos del siguiente Nivel, la rescató de las calles de Los Ángeles para darle la oportunidad de formar parte de algo grandioso que está por venir.

La historia se cuenta a tres bandas y en diferentes líneas temporales. Comenzamos la historia desde los ojos del agente Guardagujas, un hombre cansado con ganas de retirarse, que investiga los hechos ocurridos unos días atrás en el rancho Luz de Luna y al líder de una secta llamado Drew Standish. Por otro lado vamos conociendo a Chloe, la última persona en recabar en la nombrada secta, que desea más atención por parte de su líder y aspira a ser la primera en "florecer". Y por último conocemos a Immacolata, una misteriosa mujer capaz de moverse por el espacio-tiempo sin necesidad de moverse de su asiento.

A pesar de ser una historia corta (128 pág.), he de confesar que hacia la mitad de la misma tuve que volver a empezar. La novela tiene un inicio muy confuso, y las historias se van poco a poco entrelazando. Gracias a esa segunda lectura pude empezar a unir cabos y a medida que iba avanzando la cosa iba teniendo más sentido. Fue una lectura entretenida, aunque algo confusa en su inicio, que gustará a cualquier amante de Expediente X y/o las conspiraciones (Área 51, los hombres de negro, Tunguska...) y con un cierto regusto lovecraftiano.

Destacar también la cantidad de referencias que hace la autora (y que la traductora ha incluido en numerosas notas al pie) a la cultura americana, así como a canciones o a poesías.

taylor_hohulin's review against another edition

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5.0

Creepy, weird, and incredibly absorbing. This book was 1000% FOR ME.

qalminator's review against another edition

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4.0

Odd nearly hallucinatory novella. If you took Twelve Monkeys, crossed it with Slaughterhourse 5, then sprinkled liberally with Lovecraftian themes, you might get something like this, but not as lyrically written. Impressive.