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He, She and It
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Group Selections > He, She and It by Marge Piercy (January 2014)

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Taylor (seffietay) He, She and It (published under the title Body of Glass outside the USA) is an award-winning feminist science fiction/cyberpunk novel by Marge Piercy, published in 1991. Winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award for Best Science Fiction in the United Kingdom,[1] the novel examines gender roles, human identity and AI, political economy, environmentalism, love, and storytelling through a suspenseful plot, set in a post-apocalyptic America, of the romance between a human woman and the cyborg created to protect her community from corporate raiders. (Thanks wikipedia!)

Romance and cyborgs! What more could you want.


Kathleen (kathlil) | 30 comments This is a great book! I am surprised not that many people have read it yet. Marge Piercy is is an excellent writer. The character development is great, even the android's.


Taylor (seffietay) I love Marge Piercy's writing. I'm only about 80 pages into He, She and It but it is fabulous so far.


Taylor (seffietay) This is an entertaining and thought-provoking book. The character building is great, and the pacing is fairly good, but it started to drag for me just after midway through. I find it hard, personally, to connect with female characters that are largely driven by connections to their children, and I struggled a bit with Ari's inclusion in the tale, particularly towards the end (view spoiler)

Overall the story was just a touch too romantical for me, but I thought the world building was great. The idea of creating a cyborg capable of independent thought with the limited intended use of a weapon is interesting. I thought Shira's actions at the very end were also very interesting.

I liked that there were so many strong female characters (does anyone else find it annoying that 'strong' female characters are labelled as such but 'strong' male characters are just 'male characters' as if the 'strong' is implied?) I particularly liked Nili.

Anyone else make progress on this yet?


Adelaide Blair I loved it, although I found Shira's attachment to Gadi to be annoying. 1) So much obsession about a boy. 2) Gadi just seemed annoying, self-centered, and silly. I loved Nili, but why would she sleep with such a dip? At least she didn't find him obsession-worthy like Shira did.

I liked Shira's progression as an individual, but yeah (view spoiler)


Taylor (seffietay) Shira's Gadi obsession is definitely redic. I loved how Piercy's writing really made Gadi come alive as a character, but he sure was detestable. And (view spoiler)


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