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Beggars in Spain by Nancy Kress
Beggars in Spain by Nancy Kress










Beggars in Spain by Nancy Kress

The narrator does her best with the thin story line - which lacks logical direction. One large sloppy collection of words with no editor and yet people are talking about it like it is the crucible of audio entertainment. Horrible, boaring with zero character development If you can find the novella, read that, but skip the book. I stuck with it for a long time hoping it would go back to the great book it was in the beginning. I AM NOT ARGUING, MERELY CORRECTING YOUR FALSE STATEMENT Now the book is preachy, telling not showing, lots of talking, no depth to characters who come in and out willy nilly. Then book 2 starts and probably what she added to the original novella. I loved the whole story and was really enjoying it. How it affected her, her family and society. Nancy covered all angles of the child growing up. The story is mostly about a girl that has this done to her and her growing up. Their were also other genetic enhancements to go with this, such as increased intelligence and looks, athleticism, etc. It was all about this new genetic engineering that could make your baby never need to sleep. Nancy won a Hugo for the novella by the same name and that must have been book one here. This is divided into four books and after reading the first book, I thought I had found another go to author. THE DELIBERATELY BLIND, DESERVE NOT TO SEE












Beggars in Spain by Nancy Kress