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Termush (Faber Editions)
Termush (Faber Editions): Introduced by Jeff VanderMeer | Sven Holm
8 posts | 4 read | 19 to read
Introduced by Jeff VanderMeer, welcome to a luxury hotel at the end of the world in this post-apocalyptic 1967 dystopia ...
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sebrittainclark
Termush | Sven Holm
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Pickpick

3.5/5

This strange, speculative story takes place immediately after a nuclear disaster where a group of wealthy people have pre-paid to stay in safety at a hotel. The narrator and the other guests become increasingly disconnected from the world outside the hotel as they face censorship and their inability to adjust psychologically to what has happened. It's a quick and unsettling read told from the perspective of an unreliable narrator.

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BarbaraBB
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Pickpick

This is a short yet frightening account of what could happen in case of a nuclear war. The rich have assured themselves of a spot in the luxurious Termush hotel, where they will be safe and can continue life as they knew it. Then other survivors, often sick with radiation sickness, start arriving on the premises, pleading for help. That‘s not what the rich payed for…

(Photo: Chatel, France)

batsy Happy you liked it. Great photo! 4mo
TrishB Great pic 👍🏻 and we can‘t upset the rich can we! 4mo
BarbaraBB @TrishB We can by turning up unexpectedly at their refuge 😄 4mo
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BarbaraBB @batsy Thanks for the recommendation! 4mo
Soubhiville Beautiful! And this sounds like a book I‘d like so I stacked it 😁📚. 4mo
sarahbarnes Glad to see you liked this too! 4mo
70 likes6 stack adds6 comments
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BarbaraBB
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#WeeklyForecast 52/23

A little late but here‘s my forecast. I just started Songs for the Missing, from O‘Nan‘s backlist. Next will be the tagged one, based on @batsy ‘s review. I hope to fit in another one for #litsytob24 and a thriller, The Soulmate, because I am on vacation and thrillers are always my companion while vacationing!

LeahBergen Thrillers are the best on holiday. Enjoy your time away! 4mo
batsy I hope you like Termush. Perfect for reading while at a hotel, maybe... 😆 Enjoy your vacation! 4mo
TrishB Enjoy your holiday ❤️ 4mo
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squirrelbrain Have a lovely holiday! ❤️ (edited) 4mo
Hooked_on_books I read Songs for the Missing years ago and it‘s still with me. Great book. Have a wonderful vacation! 4mo
BarbaraBB @Hooked_on_books That is good to know! I am about a hundred pages in now 4mo
sarahbarnes I also have the tagged book on my list due to a great review from @batsy ! 4mo
batsy @sarahbarnes 😊 I was influenced by @Bookwomble 's review to get to it sooner 😁 4mo
Bookwomble @batsy Am I an Internet Influencer now? 😄 I'm glad you liked it. How you've had a happy festive period 😊 4mo
Bookwomble @batsy "I hope you've..." 4mo
Megabooks Yay for vacay! I‘m reading the Ward now. So dark!! 4mo
BarbaraBB @Megabooks I hope you‘ll love it, but yes, it is dark! 4mo
58 likes12 comments
review
batsy
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Pickpick

The slim, hypnotic novella of the wealthy barricading themselves in a luxury hotel against the radioactive fallout of a nuclear disaster doesn't read like fiction; this is 100% what would happen in our world if it were possible. It's short & dreamy, a slow-burn of a book that gets under your skin & unsettles. The fear of contamination, of the "rights" of the powerful to be able to restrict the rights of the ordinary—all too horrifyingly familiar.

batsy "That vote was a simple demonstration of freedom, but it went against the principle of freedom. It restricted the freedom of the injured, their right to be helped. For that reason I would not call the vote democratic." Restricting the right of the injured to be helped is so pertinent to current events right now that it kind of hurts the heart to read 5mo
Soubhiville That definitely sounds like it could be nonfiction. 😔 5mo
Ruthiella I‘m not sure I could read that. And to think it was published 50 years ago. 5mo
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reading_rainbow This sounds good 5mo
batsy @Soubhiville Truly 😣 5mo
batsy @Ruthiella Yes. It's not violent or graphic in any way, but conveys both the satire of the wealthy and and horrible reality of societal breakdown effectively in elegant language. 5mo
batsy @reading_rainbow I'm glad that Faber has made some of these texts available for a new audience! 5mo
squirrelbrain This sounds great - stacking. 5mo
sarahbarnes Oh this sounds good. Stacking. 5mo
LeahBergen Great review! 5mo
Suet624 Written 50 years ago? And still so true to form. How depressing. When do those better angels arrive? (edited) 5mo
Reggie Sounds great. Stacked! 5mo
batsy @LeahBergen Thank you! 5mo
batsy @Suet624 😣 5mo
BarbaraBB Sounds like a terrifying foreboding. But I am intrigued by your review and that stunning cover! 5mo
batsy @BarbaraBB It's very short, as a bonus! 5mo
BarbaraBB Already ordered it 🤦🏻‍♀️ are you in our #litsytob24? Missing you there! 5mo
Tamra Yes, sounds very much like it would comport with reality. (edited) 5mo
batsy @BarbaraBB I hope to! I haven't been able to read any of the longlist at all so I'd like to do more research before I vote 🤓 My inclination is to vote for the books I've read and liked, but that might defeat the purpose?! 5mo
batsy @Tamra Very much so, sadly. 5mo
BarbaraBB It won‘t! I voted for a mix of books that I want to read, books I liked and books I want others to read (mostly translated to counterbalance the American/English ones) 5mo
batsy @BarbaraBB OK yes, that's what I was thinking of as well. Thank you! Need to get voting tonight. 5mo
76 likes6 stack adds23 comments
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Lizpixie
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Bk7 of my #BookMail is this very pretty Faber Edition of a classic SFF novel. This post-apocalyptic 1967 dystopia is set in Termush, a luxury coastal resort. All the wealthy guests are survivors, preppers who reserved rooms long before the Disaster. Exclusive radiation shelters, lavish provisions inside, radioactive dust outside. Surviving the apocalypse is just the start of their problems, soon Management starts censoring news & sedating guests.

Bookwomble I really enjoyed this. It felt sadly all too relevant to present world issues. 8mo
35 likes1 comment
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Bookwomble
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Pickpick

"I must ask myself whether I am not colouring what I see with my own views."

Holm leaves enough space in the text that his narrator's self-query is relevant to the reader, also. It's a book of impressions, partially understood events & delirium, that, coloured by my own views, perhaps, seems like a metaphor for late stage capitalism. The rich provide themselves with a haven from social collapse, leave the poor to suffer, and start to splinter ⬇️

Bookwomble ... into authoritarian factions. There is an obvious violence inherent in this, which does manifest itself in the narrative, but the atmosphere is rather that of a dream or a state of increasing dissociation and withdrawal. 4⭐ 11mo
vivastory Your last sentence made me think of a Ballard novel. Definitely intrigued. 11mo
39 likes2 comments
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Bookwomble
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"- I do have some faith in democracy, but I don't think that this vote can be regarded as a matter of course as democratic. The voters knew too little about the alternatives.
- They are always Ill-informed.
- You are possibly right, but democracy does depend on certain principles of freedom and these are often more essential than demonstrations of freedom. That vote was a demonstration of freedom, but it went against the principles of freedom."

Bookwomble Gosh, I'm really struggling to apply this quote from 1967 to a modern-day context. I guess that sometimes speculative fiction just misses the mark 🤷🏻‍♂️🫠 11mo
The_Book_Ninja From ‘67 you say? Unreal. 11mo
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja Plus ça change... (Pardon my French) 11mo
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CarolynM I wonder if the author foresaw the modern day blatant lying to secure votes? 11mo
Bookwomble @CarolynM I think it's as old as democracy! 11mo
32 likes7 comments
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Bookwomble
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What? 🤨
Post-apocalypse? ☢️
Dystopian, you say? 👮
Luxury bunker complex in which the mega-wealthy shelter while the rest of the world descends into nightmarish chaos?🔥☠️🔥
Hmm 🤔
And you say this is science fiction rather than journalism? 🧐
Very well, you've piqued my interest, sir. Pass it over 📖

Ruthiella First published in 1967 is my catnip. I like to see what was envisioned and what has really happened in the past half century. 11mo
LeahBergen These new Faber editions are so intriguing! 11mo
Bookwomble @Ruthiella I read in someone's review of a different book that it could not be classed as "dystopian" as it was too close to present-day USA reality. Err, hello! Welcome to your dystopian reality! ⏰?☕ 11mo
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Bookwomble @LeahBergen They are! This is an interview with the Faber editor of the Editions about her finding Termush in their archive. What a job! 💕📚💕 https://www.londonreviewbookshop.co.uk/blog/2023/may/what-was-this-odd-creature-... 11mo
batsy Yes! I've added it to the TBR. I agree with @LeahBergen they've brought out some interesting books recently that I'm keen to get to. 11mo
Bookwomble @batsy They've only published 6 (I think) in this series, but hopefully they'll keep raiding those archives to offer us these neglected gems. 11mo
LeahBergen I want to be an “archive mole”. 😆 11mo
Bookwomble @LeahBergen How fantastic would that job title be? 😀 Maybe give you some trouble on the passport going through border control, though! 😑🕵️‍♂️ 11mo
LeahBergen @Bookwomble I think so! 😆 11mo
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