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The Janus Cycle (English Edition) Formato Kindle
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Copertina flessibile
"Ti preghiamo di riprovare" | 13,52 € | 12,22 € |
- Formato Kindle
3,49 € Leggilo con la nostra App gratuita - Copertina flessibile
13,52 €
- LinguaInglese
- Data di pubblicazione2 gennaio 2015
- Dimensioni file665 KB
Dettagli prodotto
- ASIN : B00R4YLBC6
- Editore : Elsewhen Press (2 gennaio 2015)
- Lingua : Inglese
- Dimensioni file : 665 KB
- Da testo a voce : Abilitato
- Screen Reader : Supportato
- Miglioramenti tipografici : Abilitato
- X-Ray : Non abilitato
- Word Wise : Abilitato
- Memo : Su Kindle Scribe
- Lunghezza stampa : 226 pagine
- Numeri di pagina fonte ISBN : 1908168463
- Recensioni dei clienti:
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There are eight stories in this collection, each told from a different point of view, and each told in the first-person perspective. Connecting each story is the club, Janus, a kind of alt-rock/counter-culture getaway frequented by society’s outsiders and fringe-dwellers. Every city has a club like this, where the people who don’t fall into an accepted mould hang out, brought together by their differences; a place where they can escape the derision of those who would have them conform. However, as the stories progress and the threads of the narrative are woven together, it becomes clear that Janus is changing, that the clientele are becoming more homogenous, and the outsiders are slowly being pushed out.
The stories themselves run a wide gamut of human experiences; the rise and fall of relationships, the need to belong, the quest for emotional fulfilment, the search for companionship and understanding, and the desire just to be accepted for who you are. In fact, the idea of acceptance is very much central to the shared narrative of this collection, with a good proportion of the characters falling somewhere on the LGBTQ spectrum. Consequently, each character’s journey has its share of pitfalls, as well as rewards. Sometimes this can make for difficult reading, though the prose is strong enough to pull you through the various hazards the characters face along the way. By the end of the final story, while not every problem or hurdle has been completely overcome, you’re left with a feeling that the individual protagonists have found a way to exist, that they’ve each found their own individual light to guide them.
All in all I truly enjoyed this enticing and intriguing little collection, and definitely recommend it if you’re into urban fantasy with a twist, or are looking for something with good, strong LGBTQ representation. A strong four out of five stars.

After the first couple of chapters I boxed the book as a coming-of-age story. Having read it all the way through I consider it more as a reflection piece because even though all characters apparently are “young adults”, I find this book a wondrous mirror on what could have been. Have we made the right choices in life to be ourselves, have we sold-out, lied to ourselves, made ourselves miserable without any good reasons. The Janus Cycle isn’t providing answers to this but it opened up my mind on the “what could have been” for better or for worse, always on the level of emotional consequences. Many books on this topic end up being condescending or lecturing at best. Turner, however, avoids this doom elegantly by stepping just a small bit outside the line of reality while keeping us intrigued and involved by using places, we have all seen, people we have all met and incidents we have all experienced.
A reviewer mentioned that the book might lack a touch of subtlety. I beg to differ on that point as Turner does not only differentiate the emotional journeys of his characters with a superior lens of detail but also generates a distinguishable writing-style separating his characters as if their story was written by a different author.
Connecting all stories, the underlying theme culminates in the final chapter and sheds light on the title and the deeper meaning of the main location Janus, challenging the reader with a duel glove slap:
Are you brave enough to help yourself and others to make a difference?

A review of the Janus Cycle
The debut novel from Tej Turner pulls no punches and wears its heart on its sleeve, but what it might lack in a touch of subtlety, it replaces with intrigue and breadth of character.
Set in an unnamed city, the seemingly 24 hour licenced club ‘Janus’ provides the omnipresent backdrop for a story that sprawls over a wide cast of characters. Through eight chapters, the venue is portrayed as functional, recreational and integral to the lives of the protagonists that narrate them and it is here that the novel’s primary success lies – Turner is able to transmigrate between a range of apparent social misfits, yet still give an equal and sympathetic voice to each.
After a few apparently distinct chapters, the story eventually weaves a coherent – if not slightly brief and dramatic climax. Turner creates a range of characters, each of which takes a paradigmatic shift of a journey through their individual chapter, whether it be an admission that their current relationship is inadequate or that they haven’t fully understood their inherited powers of temporal manipulation.
If there is a drawback to this novel, it can be found in its unrelenting pace and (as alluded to in my introduction) its occasional lack of subtlety. To give an example – one character discovers, masters AND accepts her ability to travel through time in less than a paragraph. In the context of the whole book, this is perhaps not quite as significant as the novel’s apparent genre of ‘speculative fiction’ would lead you to imagine, but it does leave a fair few stones unturned in terms of character development and exploration of ‘classic’ fantasy/sci-fi themes. Equally, Turner’s various social commentaries on mobile technology, fashion and finance (to name just three!) throughout the book might be a little over wrought for some, but being no expert in fantasy, I perhaps miss the point of the narrative.
I must mention Janus itself in this review – Turner has created an excellent location which we learn everything – and nothing – about through the course of the novel. The club is genuinely compelling with its seemingly endless corridors and less than satisfactory narcotics policy (what night club allows its patrons to bring their own drink?!). Ultimately, Janus has a demise of sorts at the end, but, as the title suggests, it finds its spiritual redemption (or rebirth) through the characters that colour it. Here, Turner understands an often forgotten truth about being young and in love – it doesn’t matter about the music, the drink or even the location – it’s about the people you spend time with – a truth that is ultimately carried through positive conclusion of the book.
In some respects, the book left me with more questions than answers (as great stories should), but I understand that Tej Turner is considering a return to some of the characters in future novels. I will read any further instalments of course, but for the moment I am satisfied with what I’ve learnt and what’s still left to learn from any future work. A grand debut.

“Have you ever heard of a place called Janus?”
“Janus? What is that?”
“It’s a club…It’s a place where people are accepted, even if they are a bit different.”
The above quotes are from the chapter “Blisters.” The narrator of the chapter is Tilly (Charlie) and is about the realisation that she is a girl trapped in a boy’s body. Her psychiatrist diagnoses “gender dysphoria” and her challenging physical journey begins. This upheaval for Tilly is nothing compared to the emotional journey that she goes through with her peers at school. Poor Tilly!
Who could she could turn to?
The Janus Club, and the mysterious Frelia are pivotal for Tilly’s story.
The Janus Cycle is not the genre of book that I normally read, but I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Well done Tej Turner on your debut novel.

Each chapter an almost self contained short story in its own right.
A central character, Frelia,and a pivotal location, Janus, the common thread that binds them together.
An interesting dichotomy, a tale of both those pilloried by society for their difference and of those with an inherent need to conform and the complicity that can ensue, however abhorrent the actions.
Not my usual genre but I am a convert.
A highly successful first novel and I will look forward to the next one....