ISBN 0-575-06052-2 (UK hbk)
novel, science fiction, cyberpunk, C-60, carbon-60, buckminsterfullerene, buckyballs, posthuman, transhuman, panhuman, mutation, evolution, nature, space migration
Near future.
"Gaby McAslan's heart is set on a career in network journalism, but when the brightside of Iapetus starts diminishing, and Hyperion disappears completely, her destiny is truly set. As the mysterious fate of Saturn's moons draws her to London and fires her ambition, so a meteor drags her even further, across whole continents, to Kenya, the site of the Kilimanjaro Event. Where the meteor landed, the striking African landscape has given way to something equally beautiful -- and indescribably alien.
"A little like a multi-coloured rain forest, a little like a drained coral reef, but mostly like nothing anyone has ever seen before, the alien flora deposited on Earth from the stars is spreading at a phenomenal rate.
"It's dubbed the Chaga, in memory of the first of the African tribes to be engulfed and swallowed by the unceasing expansion. It destroys all plastics and man-made materials -- and it moulds human flesh, bone and spirit to its own designs, as varied and as incomprehensible as the Chaga's own multitude of forms.
"And when Gaby McAslan finds the first man to survive the Chaga's changes, she realizes the Chaga has its own plans for humankind -- and the face of the future is both terrifying and awesome..." [jacket blurb, UK hbk, 1995]
"An object impacts the Earth triggering off an ever-growing alien landscape composed of buckminsterfullerene (carbon-60) and nanotechnology. This 'buckyball jungle' is taking over the planet and forcing mankind into a new stage of development." --Henry W.Targowski (in Mark/Space , September 1997).
"Though this book shares the same setting, background and many of the same characters and situations as my 1990 novelette Towards Kilimanjaro , it is not a direct sequel to that story, but rather an expansion and refinement of its ideas. Readers of both may notice a number of seeming inconsistencies; these are deliberate; Towards Kilimanjaro should be read as a working prototype for this book." --Ian McDonald (from the Preface).
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