EBOOK
Pages
132
Year
2014
Language
English

About

An insane, broken pulp-art painter gets chance at redemption in a phantasmagoric science fiction wonder from a true master of the weird Before his stroke and the onset of old age, Frank Lazorg was the king of the fantasy illustrators-with an ego to match. But he can paint no more. That is, until he starts taking a bizarre new drug that promises to restore his creative powers. Unfortunately, artistic reinvigoration comes with a steep price tag: addiction and madness. With his rage and jealousy unleashed and his grasp of reality severely compromised, Lazorg is led to commit an unspeakable act, and, in turn, is led . . . somewhere else. Suddenly naked and helpless, the artist finds himself in a world of abiding strangeness, filled with monstrous things that seem to mock, yet oddly mirror, Lazorg's previous reality. And here is Crutchsump, a remarkable creature possessing great love and rare compassion, who could possibly aid in Lazorg's ultimate salvation as he spirals downward through the Cosmocopia and ever-closer to the Conceptus.   Arguably the most inventive force in science fiction since Philip K. Dick in his heyday, Paul Di Filippo outdoes even Paul Di Filippo with his remarkable Cosmocopia. Outrageous, ingenious, nightmarish, funny, provocative, and utterly unforgettable, this is a glittering testament to the towering heights science fiction can achieve.

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Reviews

"Comic, disorienting and evocative, sometimes all at once . . . Di Filippo has implanted a bizarre, funny and melodramatically inclined fantasy world within the 'real' world of his story . . . showing both the nightmarish multiplicity of worlds and the hazy line demarcating genre art from a supposedly higher form."
Los Angeles Times
"If you really loved your loved ones, you'd get them Cosmocopia by Paul Di Filippo. . . . [It] may actually be the most demented thing I've ever read by him. And if you've read Di Filippo's work, you'll know that's a tall order. . . . A thought-provoking, exciting read."
Los Angeles Times
"Literary genius . . . Like watching a flower opening up, or a baby being born-it was almost that amazing. . . . This is a thoughtful, psychedelic art trip."
SF Site

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