Reviews for The strange bird : a Borne story

Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* Before the end of the Company, before the rise of the cruel Mord and the discovery of the creature Borne, there was the Strange Bird, created in a distant lab in a dying world for an unknown purpose. One of many experimental creatures, she escapes the lab and discovers true freedom of flight, of choice, of self-awareness until it is snatched away by cruel humans. Eventually, she is taken to the Magician, a mad scientist who surgically remakes the Strange Bird to suit her own needs, in a horrific scene. But the true anguish is what comes after, living on as a helpless tool with the consciousness of marginally better times; Strange Bird longs to go back to the place where she could not tell the time at all. Yet, as with Borne (2017), Vandermeer leaves a little light to guide his devastated creation on her long journey. With hallucinatory imagery and expressive prose, this companion novella to Borne is beautiful and bleak, painful and rewarding in equal measure.--Hutley, Krista Copyright 2018 Booklist


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A lyrical if dark-hearted sidenote to VanderMeer's wonderfully inventive dystopian novel Borne (2017).When the singularity arrives, as it surely will, it will do so on extended wings. Where Borne, the blobby union of various genetic brews, escaped from the ruins of a biotech factory owned by the spectacularly malign Company, the Strange Bird, as she is called, "did not know what sky really was as she flew down underground corridors in the dark," experiencing the rapturous freedom of flight while not quite understanding what was happening to her outside her cage. The Strange Bird, like all critters in this hellish place, is not just bird, but comprises bits and pieces of biotechnology, other DNA, and even some human materialthough this heritage does not incline her to like or trust humans, not in the least. Good thing, for just about every human she encounters has designs on her, from the old man who captures her out in the desert and assures her that otherwise she "would be in something's belly by now" to the magician who marvels at the "sad, unlucky lab bird that never existed before" even as she speculates about how the Strange Bird, ever worse for the wear, might be remade into something more immediately useful. Mord the giant bear, Rachel, Wick, and other figures from Borne turn up to join in fun and games that make the future world of the Terminator film series seem right jolly. The story doesn't always quite add up, and there's some spackling and grouting to do to make it neatly join up to its parent novel, doubtless the work of sequels to come. Still, Vandermeer writes circles around most fantasists at work today, and the story, while rewarding of itself, is of an elegantly bleak piece with its predecessor, reminiscent of the best of Brian Aldiss and Philip K. Dick.VanderMeer fans will treasure this installment in the Borne saga while hoping for something more substantial to followand soon. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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