by Philip Jose Farmer ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 22, 1990
Concluding the trilogy begun with the excellent Dayworld (1984) and feebly continued with Dayworld Rebel (1987), here's an enterprise ludicrously overexpanded from a fine short story, ""The Sliced-Crosswise. Only-On-Tuesday World."" In the fourth millennium, people live only one day a week, spending the other six ""stoned,"" in stasis capsules. But ""Daybreaker"" criminal William Duncan (he lived every day, using a different personality to suit) has discovered that the Earth is no longer overpopulated--which also means that there's no longer any justification for the Dayworld system's existence: it's merely a method of ensuring power and immortality for the ruling elite. So Duncan and his renegade-cop girlfriend, Panthea Snick, determine to destroy the entire Dayworld system. The pair enjoy a measure of success, and uncover some powerful allies--but the composite William Duncan persona is still unstable, so he surrenders in order to undergo prolonged therapy and stir up popular support for the revolution. Jolting, churning, pointless action-adventure shading off into soporific, numbing psychoanalysis, devoid of vitality and bereft of new ideas: altogether, a wretched wrap-up.
Pub Date: June 22, 1990
ISBN: N/A
Page Count: -
Publisher: Tor--dist. by St. Martin's
Review Posted Online: N/A
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 1990
Categories: FICTION
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