The Exile Kiss

by George Alec Effinger

Paperback, 2006

Call number

813.54

Publication

New York : Orb Books, 2006.

Description

From a Nebula Award winner: A "phenomenal," action-packed tale of crime, corruption, and cybernetics (Locus). Set in a divided near future, The Exile Kiss is author George Alec Effinger's third book about the high-tech Arab ghetto called the Budayeen. It is a world filled with mind- or mood-altering drugs for any purpose; brains enhanced by electronic hardware, with plug-in memory additions and new personalities; and bodies shaped to perfection by surgery. Marid Audran, having risen from the rank of street hustler, is now an enforcer for Friedlander Bey, one of the most feared men in the Budayeen. But betrayal and exile send Marid and Bey out into the lifeless Arabian desert. Can they survive on their own? Will they make it back into hostile territory? Will they find their revenge? With this culmination of the sequence of Marid books, readers will quickly understand why this series is considered one of the great works of modern SF and a defining example of the cyber-punk genre.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1991

Physical description

8.3 inches

ISBN

076531360X / 9780765313607

User reviews

LibraryThing member xenoi
A very odd combination of fey decadence and Islamic sternness set in a (rather impossible) future Middle East. I could not finish this book. How shall I put it? Despite its laborious attempts at humor, chaotic plotting, and icky, unerotic sex, at least the protagonist was uninteresting.
LibraryThing member lithicbee
In the third and final book of the Marid Audran trilogy, Marid and Freidlander Bey are sent into the deep desert after being falsely accused of murder. Marid must solve that murder and help Bey back to the Budayeen to enact their vengeance. Half of the book takes place in the desert and half in the
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city, and I found it to be more rambling than "A Fire in the Sun." Cons: the plot threads in the book are resolved over-quickly in the last few pages, and this is the least cyberpunkish of the three books. Pros: this is a quick read and it fills in some more of the larger world around the Budayeen.
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