The Digital Parchment Services Celebration Of Science Fiction and Fantasy Author Jody Scott

Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Grumbooks Raves About Jody Scott's SF Fan Favorite Novel, Passing For Human!

Here's a great review of Jody Scott's Passing For Human, from Grumbooks.

The brand new edition of Passing for Human will be out shortly from Digital Parchment Services/Strange Particle Press

I missed this book when it first came out (and only came across it as I’m obsessively filling in the gaps in my Women’s Press science fiction collection). This was my loss. 
The basic story is fairly straightforward sf fare. Alien anthropologists study earth, despair at humans, decide they are a disease that needs wiping out, whilst doing battle with other aliens who wish to enslave humanity (and perhaps produce what would be the most frighteningly efficient and expendable race of warriors the galaxy has ever seen).
In the hands of a lesser writer that could have been a big, steaming pile of schlock. In the hands of Jody Scott, it is a funny, compassionate, and rip-roaring adventure that exposes the flaws in the alien cultures just as readily as it exposes our own. 
The pace of the story never lets up, yet it finds room for serious contemplation of humanity’s woes. The style is easy, with an edge of noir. The central character is a bit of a tough girl which, mixed with her naivety about humans, makes for an intriguing and likeable character. Especially as she (in common with the other aliens) inhabits bodies she has chosen from Earth culture – Brenda Starr, Emma Peel, and Virginia Woolf. Who could not like that, especially the final scenes in which Virginia Woolf is involved in a running gun battle. 
The humour, pace, and wry observation make this a rare and wonderful beast – a serious science fiction novel that doesn’t take itself seriously.
Graeme K Talboys

BESTSELLERS (October, 1977) Loves Passing For Human

Check out this very nice review for Jody's Passing For Human from Bestsellers (October, 1977):


PASSING FOR HUMAN

Mgrird Nixon is the name of Brenda Starr's robot-slave. Or slaves, as she owns several hundred. But Brenda Starr is not really Brenda Starr. She is one of several spare bodies put to use by Benaroya. a 36-foot, dolphin-like extraterrestrial who is furthering her anthropological studies on earth as she hunts down the evil cosmic being who is wor­shipped on 11 primitive planets as the Prince of Darkness. Scott's dar­ing and sense of pure fun makes her first novel a memorable one. a splen­did blend of satire and sf adventure.