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The Wild Cards universe has been thrilling readers for over 25 years. David D. Levine's "Discards" introduces Tiago Gonçalves, a teenager who scrapes collecting recyclables from the landfills of Rio de Janeiro. But after the Wild Card virus infects him, he learns to build something more.

At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

36 pages, Kindle Edition

First published March 30, 2016

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About the author

David D. Levine

116 books184 followers
David D. Levine is the author of novel Arabella of Mars (Tor 2016) and over fifty SF and fantasy stories. His story "Tk'Tk'Tk" won the Hugo Award, and he has been shortlisted for awards including the Hugo, Nebula, Campbell, and Sturgeon. Stories have appeared in Asimov's, Analog, F&SF, and five Year's Best anthologies as well as award-winning collection Space Magic from Wheatland Press.

David is a contributor to George R. R. Martin's bestselling shared-world series Wild Cards. He is also a member of publishing cooperative Book View Cafe and of nonprofit organization Oregon Science Fiction Conventions Inc. He has narrated podcasts for Escape Pod, PodCastle, and StarShipSofa, and his video "Dr. Talon's Letter to the Editor" was a finalist for the Parsec Award. In 2010 he spent two weeks at a simulated Mars base in the Utah desert.

David lives in Portland, Oregon with his wife Kate Yule. His web site is www.daviddlevine.com.

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Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews
Profile Image for Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽.
1,880 reviews23.3k followers
April 25, 2016
Review first posted at www.FantasyLiterature.com:

Discards is a SF novelette set in the WILD CARDS shared universe, an alternative history in which an airborne alien virus was released in New York City after WWII and from there spread worldwide. The virus kills 90% of the humans who come into contact with it and mutates the rest, with 9% (the “Jokers”) developing useless, often repulsive, deformities and just 1% (the “Aces”) gaining superpowers.

Discards takes place in Rio de Janeiro, among the outcasts of society. Tiago, a fifteen-year-old homeless boy who gets by collecting and reselling recyclable materials, wakes up one morning from a feverish sleep to find that he’s contracted the Wild Card virus. It has disfigured Tiago, giving him a patchwork of different skin colors and mismatched features. Rejected by everyone around him, Tiago loses even the small amount of security he had in life, and heads off to try to make a new life with other Jokers, or curinga. It’s a desperate life of poverty, in a world of drugs and violence, but when Tiago discovers that the Wild Card virus has also gifted him with a new ability, new possibilities begin to open up for him.

Levine’s description of the grim life of a street kid in the slums of Rio hits home, with the desperation and the lawlessness underscored by the careless, wealthy tourists who flit in and out of the area. Tiago tries to live an honorable life as best he can, driven to theft but avoiding the greater evil of drug running. His superpower, as he begins to more fully develop it, has a poignant connection to his life as a catadore, a collector of recycled materials, as well as to his status as a person discarded by society, but Tiago learns to make the most of the hand he’s been dealt.

Free online at Tor.com.
Profile Image for Andrew.
2,569 reviews
May 8, 2021
Have you ever read a story where you are not sure if the author is trying to make a point or if you are reading (no pun intended) too much in to a story.

Here you have a street child literally having to make a living off other peoples rubbish - when his card turns and he joins the gifted/cursed few that survive the Wild Card virus.

What follows is a whistle stop tour of how he has to find a new life after the old one rejects him and in so doing finds what the cards have dealt him.

Now the initial comment relates to the fact that I am not sure if we are being shown what "gift" this really is or if that even when things look so bleak there is always (with a price) a way out. Am not sure but I felt this story was a little too well constructed and maybe a little contrived but still another interesting story of when the virus visited someone outside of the US
Profile Image for Anthony.
83 reviews
May 10, 2018
This is a short story, not a novel, obviously. It is part of the shared universe series created by George R. R. Martin and others many years ago, and still have a devoted though under the radar following.
This might change soon, with Martin's new minted massive fame, there is series talk of a TV series based on the books and stories.

In this small and unassuming story we meet an orphaned young teenager named Tiago, living in the extreme poverty of the slums Brazil, with the armies of drug gangs vying for control among themselves, while a corrupt government holds back any advance while taking sides in the ongoing turf wars.

When Tiago wakes up in his squat one evening he finds himself changed. The Wild Card Virus has infected him, and though it didn't kill him, it has turned him into a Joker, the feared percentage of the infected that find themselves mutated. Some infected are transformed into monstrosities, while others are so inconspicuously changed that they can almost"pass," for a "Nat" a person uninfected. This isn't the case for Tiago, his skin has been transformed into a patchwork of skin tones and textures. He seems like someone put together from the discarded trash he scavenges for through the dumps around the slums, finding things to sell or create art with.

We follow his effort to make it in the world of the Jokers and drug lords. He slowly becomes aware that like some of those changed into Jokers, he is a Joker-Ace, a Joker with a special ability. He will find a new life looming ahead of him as this short tale ends, as he remakes himself into The Recycler.

This short story does what the shorter stand alone tales of the Wild Card universe do: introduce new protagonists or antagonists; Aces, Jokers and Joker-Aces.

It gets the job done, and is worth a quick read, whether you are new to the shared world, or an old fan like myself.
Profile Image for Kieran McAndrew.
3,097 reviews20 followers
January 19, 2025
Tiago draws a wild card and is forced out of his home. Struggling to survive on the streets, he discovers his talent to draw organic material to himself is more useful than he first thought.

Levine's evocative writing brings the dignity of Tiago to the fore. Even small characters should have a chance to shine.
Profile Image for Peyton Banks.
167 reviews2 followers
January 13, 2017
I wish I would have read this before High Stakes. I really enjoyed getting to know Tiago from this perspective rather than the one offered by the triad he appears in. I love joker-aces so I enjoyed learning about his power. i also appreciated the unique worldview this story offered and the underlying environmentalism inherent in this story. Wild Cards is one of the best series for dealing with the marginalization of real people in my opinion, and this story is a good example of why i think that.
Profile Image for Jamie Revell.
Author 5 books13 followers
April 29, 2023
For this short story, we move from the usual Wild Cards setting of America to Rio de Janeiro, and not because any of the regular characters are visiting. It's a different perspective than usual, telling the story of a Brazilian street urchin who draws a joker and has to struggle to survive in a world that was hardly kind to him beforehand. Despite the poverty and crime on display, with plenty of battling against the odds, it's a positive story in the end (helped, as one might expect, by what exactly the card turns out to have dealt the protagonist) providing the mix of down-to-earth reality and superpowered action that Wild Cards deals with at its best.
Profile Image for Roger.
1,068 reviews13 followers
October 12, 2019
Discards takes place in the miserable economic conditions of Brazil. David Levine manages to pack a little social consciousness into an interesting Wild Cards story.
Profile Image for Katherine.
1,397 reviews17 followers
November 15, 2020
One of the better Wild Cards stories I've read. I kinda wish this was one of the earlier ones I'd run across, as this one does a good job of explaining what the universe is all about.
Profile Image for Matt Mitrovich.
Author 3 books24 followers
August 16, 2016
Originally posted at: http://amazingstoriesmag.com/2016/08/...

I didn’t have a review copy of a book that was coming out this week, so I needed to find something to read and review. That being said, Wild Cards is (hopefully) coming to television, the Olympics are currently happening in Brazil and David D. Levine’s novel, Arabella of Mars, came out last month. So I asked myself: why not review the Tor original: “Discards“?

For those who don’t know, Wild Cards is a shared universe edited primarily by George RR Martin of A Song of Ice and Fire/Game of Thrones fame. In 1946, an alien virus is unleashed over New York City, killing many, turning some into hideous freaks (known as “Jokers”) and giving just a lucky few useful superpowers (who are known as “Aces”). Its a realistic take on the superhero genre, like Watchmen, told through anthologies and mosaic novels.

“Discards” is the story of Tiago Gonçalves, a poor Brazilian teen who lives in the slums of Rio de Janeiro and picks through the landfill to find recyclables to sell. After recovering from an intense fever, he discovers he has caught the Wild Cards virus and his skin is now a patchwork of different skin colors, making him a joker. Thrown out of his home, he heads to the ghetto in Rio where the Jokers live, but finds himself on the street again when he refuses to work for the drug lords who dominate the city. While trying to survive, he learns that he has the power to draw organic material to himself. He quickly becomes one of the most efficient thieves in Rio, but when he decides to steal a rare strain of cocaine, he touches off a gang war that could get himself and many others killed.

I won’t give too much of the plot away because this is a short story, but I enjoyed “Discards”. Most of the Wild Cards stories I have read so far are set no later than the 1980s and the story had some modern references that I liked, such as a reality TV show for Aces. I also appreciated how Levine played with my expectations and took the story in different directions than those I expected. Plus, given a lot of the news that has come out ahead of the Olympics about the corruption, poverty and pollution in Brazil, I thought Levine did a good job capturing the less pleasant side of this year’s host country.

Admittedly this reminded me of a lot of the Wild Cards origin stories I have read so far. Tiago didn’t go out immediately and start saving lives with his powers (and will probably never entirely be committed to doing so). In fact, his first actions upon learning of his powers, even in our timeline, are completely criminal, which is par for a lot of Wild Cards origin stories. Admittedly, this does not make the story bad per se, but it was certainly a familiar formula. Granted it’s a formula I like, so why fix something that isn’t broken?

If you know nothing about the Wild Cards universe, “Discards” by David D. Levine is a good place to start (for one thing, it’s free). Check it out and then pick up a copy Wild Cards’ first volume. There is plenty of time before the adaptation gets made (if it ever does).
Profile Image for Theresa.
8,352 reviews135 followers
August 2, 2022
Discards (ebook)
by David D. Levine
Looking around the world for the stories of Wild Card victims. In Rio the world of Wild Cards is divided between the affluent tourism business, and the crime-filled slums. A young boy who survives by hand to mouth living in the edges of Rio's trash dumps is totally changed by his affliction of the Wild Card virus. Not only does he have a Joker card appearance, a mishmash of physical features, but he is rejected by those unaffected by the Virus. He is forced to change his life, and living, moving to the slums of Rio's Joker town, and having to run the gambit of the crime-infested town life. He finds power and gifts in his affliction that may help him if he is willing to compete on a global scale with his new abilities. This is an informed look into the world of the mosaic Wild Cards stories, and a look into the real life hazards of the poor and destitute.
Profile Image for Marco.
1,263 reviews58 followers
December 5, 2016
WildCards is the name of a book series edited by George R.R. Martin, written over the years by many different writers. In the wildcard world a new virus appeared, leaving the majority of the survivors, disparagingly called jokers, very deformed. Few lucky ones, the aces, are left with super human powers.
While I am not fond of super hero stories, I liked this novella, that is the origin story of one of this lucky survivors, the Brazilian ace "Recycler". It is the story of a young kid, living in poverty until he is abandoned by his mother. He end up living in a shack in the middle of a favela, earning few dimes each day foraging for recyclables in a landfill. And when he starts to think he has reached the bottom, he gets sick, and he lose even the little he previously had...
Profile Image for Maggie Gordon.
1,914 reviews162 followers
April 4, 2016
I have never read any of the Wildcards stories, but now I am thinking that I should! This short deals with an orphaned teenage boy from Brazil that gets infected with the Wildcard virus. He has to survive in a world that hates him, but this suddenly becomes easier when he gains certain super powers.

The story flows extremely well. While not comic, it has moments of levity despite its dark premise. It makes very good use of its setting, and it's certainly lured another reader in to the overarching series.
Profile Image for Alex Sarll.
7,122 reviews366 followers
Read
April 7, 2016
If nothing else, this Wild Cards story is a good way to get genre readers to pay attention to the lives of street kids in Rio's favelas. Spoilers: they don't have a great time of it. Still, it never quite feels like the worthy aim and the novel-enough power of the joker-ace lead add up to anything more than the sum of their parts. Perhaps if he recurs in later tales it'll feel retroactively more substantial.
Profile Image for Sarah.
3,318 reviews45 followers
April 23, 2016
I really like dipping in and out of the Wild Cards series - I've only read one of the collections so far, but I've read a couple other short stories since then. I really want to read the whole series - it's such an interesting universe. I mostly liked this one, though parts of it were a bit silly to me.
Profile Image for Katie.
8 reviews
April 16, 2016
This is the first of the Wild Cards that I have read. A simple short story for it, but I definitely enjoyed it. Was just long enough for you to connect with the character and see the beginnings of a good heroic storyline. The story was not too dark, but dreary enough to sympathize with his plight. Now I just need to read the rest of the series!
Profile Image for Soorya.
154 reviews8 followers
February 22, 2017
Set in GRRM's Wild Cards universe, this story is about Tiago, a poor teenager in Rio de Janeiro who gets infected with the Wild Card virus and transforms overnight. I loved the main character, the Brazilian setting, and how well the writing flowed. I'd definitely read more stories in this world.

http://www.tor.com/2016/03/30/discards/
Profile Image for Helena.
665 reviews
October 19, 2016
Good story but the words in portuguese in the middle of the text kinda put me off...
Profile Image for Luci.
1,164 reviews
October 26, 2016
This was a very good and very quick read. A nice fit in the Wild cards universe.
Profile Image for Laura.
81 reviews
December 23, 2016
I enjoyed the theme of discarded things getting repurposed, including people. I'm not really a fan of the superhero genre, but I do want to read more Wild Cards.
205 reviews
April 9, 2023
Enjoyable origin story

The introduction of the Recycler to the Wild Cards universe, told from his start as a young homeless teenager in Brazil
Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews

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