From Publishers Weekly
Jones's fiction (Divine Endurance; White Queen) is notable for richly textured dystopias teeming with exotically different cultures; this new novel, set in Earth's far future, is no exception. The magical robotic doll Chosen Among the Beautiful loves the "failed" (because she is infertile) woman Derveet, who is the last of the hereditary rulers of the Garuda family. Together, doll and woman join forces with two "studs" (a prince and a clown who, unlike most men, have not been rendered eunuchs), as well as with a sturdy young woman of the privileged class, to penetrate the dangerous Asian Peninsula, find a cache of the nearly mythical hallucinogen flowerdust (which blooms only once every 100 years) and, in the process, expose the mysterious Rulers' plot to wipe humans off the planet for good. The difficulties the band encounters range from social mores involving male/female relationships in a matriarchal society to peasants' planting rice in stagnant fields of salt water, to the resurgence of ancient, deadly diseases. As in Jones's other work, action and plot take a backseat to politics and plays for power, as the author and her characters revel in the victories of love over apathy. Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
The sequel to Jones' critically acclaimed Divine Endurance (1984) returns to a chaotic, future Southeast Asia and resumes the adventures of Derveet, a rebel against the matriarchal government, and Cho, her sweet-tempered, bioengineered servant. Wandering through the refugee camps of the peninsular state of Ranganar, Derveet continues building support for an insurrection against the Rulers and their enforcement troops, the Koperasi, when she discovers refugees taking flowerdust, a rare drug that imparts blissful hallucinations to the imbiber. With the help of Endang, an embittered, expatriate member of a ruling family, and Jhonni, a Ranganar citizen, Derveet must steal the flowerdust from its Koperasi distributors, who are using the drug to stir up unrest among the refugees and thereby justify their own existence. Jones serves up a heady mixture of complex political intrigue and sometimes confusing intercultural conflict that may appeal only to a small audience. Yet her rich characterizations and fully imagined settings stretch the boundaries of sf to the most literate extremity. Carl Hays
Flowerdust FROM THE PUBLISHER
Flowerdust is a companion novel to Divine Endurance, set in the same strange and distant future in Southeast Asia, where a matriarchy is both supported and threatened by the mysterious technology of foreigners in great offshore ships. Its heroine is Derveet, a charismatic political rebel leader. A powerful drug, Flowerdust, is causing trouble in the refugee camps, threatening to precipitate revolution too soon. Derveet sets out to stop the spread of the drug and in the process uncovers a secret plot of the mysterious Rulers. And behind the scenes, Divine Endurance and Chosen Among the Beautiful lurk in the shadows.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Jones's fiction (Divine Endurance; White Queen) is notable for richly textured dystopias teeming with exotically different cultures; this new novel, set in Earth's far future, is no exception. The magical robotic doll Chosen Among the Beautiful loves the ``failed'' (because she is infertile) woman Derveet, who is the last of the hereditary rulers of the Garuda family. Together, doll and woman join forces with two ``studs'' (a prince and a clown who, unlike most men, have not been rendered eunuchs), as well as with a sturdy young woman of the privileged class, to penetrate the dangerous Asian Peninsula, find a cache of the nearly mythical hallucinogen flowerdust (which blooms only once every 100 years) and, in the process, expose the mysterious Rulers' plot to wipe humans off the planet for good. The difficulties the band encounters range from social mores involving male/female relationships in a matriarchal society to peasants' planting rice in stagnant fields of salt water, to the resurgence of ancient, deadly diseases. As in Jones's other work, action and plot take a backseat to politics and plays for power, as the author and her characters revel in the victories of love over apathy. (July)
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING
What I like about Flowerdust is that while it is a very exciting action adventure involving drug running and political turmoil in an exotic, far-future Malaysia, it is also shot through with miracles, giving it a vivid, scary metaphysical power. Gwyneth Jones is one of the great science fiction writers working today. Tim Robinson