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Paperback Book Details
  • 04/2019
  • 9781733712569
  • 500 pages
  • $18.95
Stefani Bulsara
Author, Service Provider
Radio Ga Ga: A Mixtape for the End of Humanity

Adult; Sci-Fi/Fantasy/Horror; (Market)

Pop Culture is the Opiate of the Masses!

Come follow a mysterious, glitchy narrator who races through the universe, tasked with warning any sentient species about humanity's cautionary fail. Our narrator attempts to answer humanity's greatest philosophical questions to create a history of what led to their extinction. But our narrator can never surpass our radio waves, those careless whispers Earth has leaked into the universe, tickling any alien listeners with the absurdity of humanity. (♪ Saxophone Solo ♪)

Who did let the dogs out?      What does the fox say?

Is Disney really liable for large-scale child exploitation & abuse in its pop star puppy mills?

Can Tone Def Records create an automated pop star & trick the masses?

What happens when AI takes over humanity's emotional language & manipulates them with it?

Can the Wondaland hackers hijack pop culture to drive attention to their impending extinction?

Will a spoonful of sugary pop music help this meditation on our existential threats go down?

Confused?

You won't be after you read this Gitchie, Gitchie, Ya-Ya Dadaist, tour de farce masterpiece!

Reviews
Good read

Fun, lyrical, and dazzling…Radio Gaga is a journey through a dystopian world that outlines a critical perspective of the current state of humanity, and how society’s willful ignorance of the forces that threaten its existence lead to the end of the human race. 

What makes this work of art truly unique is Bulsara’s execution of the narrative, which is rich with historical facts and science, yet employs pop culture, pop music, and science fiction to make the reading quirky, light and entertaining. Radio Gaga is full of vibrant characters and is as highly educational as it is fun. Accessible to a wide variety of readers, it is a deeply contemplating call to action, with the hope of avoiding a nihilistic future that is as absurd as it is frightening.

Good Reads

Radio GaGa explores some expected topics in new, emotionally, and intellectually complicated ways. It may also inspire you to reflect on life choices and societal norms you take for granted. A perfect fusion of substantive and playful. When it's derivative, it's well placed and brings the levity that makes this book such a page-turner.

Most unique for this genre: you'll find no veiled religious dogma in Stefani's story. If you read D Listed, watch Ru Paul's Drag Race, or swoon for Neil Degrasse Tyson interviews, you will enjoy this book.

Kirkus Reviews

"An entertaining, uncompromising, often farcical near-future tale that revels in pop culture."

An unnamed narrator details the events that ultimately lead to humanity’s extinction on Earth in first-time novelist Bulsara’s sci-fi-infused satire.

Humans are gone, and the apparent sole survivor is this book’s narrator—“the emissary for an extinct race.” According to the narrator, the end of humanity begins with a pop star’s mental collapse, which monopolizes the press. Her agency’s response is to bring a class-action suit against the company where she got started as a child. Other celebrities who began as child stars turn on their former companies as well, and legislators outlaw child labor in the entertainment industry. One entrepreneur’s response is to create an entirely digital singer, from voice to body. The bot, Cyndi Mayweather, becomes a huge star to audiences who believe she’s human. But Cyndi is also the precursor to The Great Disruption—more than 80 percent of jobs become automated and render 71 percent of humans unemployed. Meanwhile, humanity can no longer ignore climate change, which culminates in devastating floods, droughts, and fires in major U.S. cities. The upper class consequently creates geodesic domes that pop up in cities around the world. In America, racism flourishes. Those in a newly minted and domed Metropolis are predominantly white, while black and brown Americans live in poverty. As they’re contending with the effects of class conflict, humans also face and are grossly unprepared for viral outbreaks. As humanity is evidently doomed, the narrator has a plan to document its history and find a way to warn the universe, provided there is life on other planets.

Despite the author’s opening “Liner Notes” calling this novel a “mixtape” and the narrator “glitchy,” Bulsara’s story is fairly traditional. The narrative, for example, is primarily linear and often focuses on specific characters, such as JA-NL, a young black girl fighting against the wealthy’s attempts to control less fortunate citizens. Likewise, Bulsara so seamlessly incorporates song lyrics—and occasionally movie quotes—that readers who don’t catch a particular reference won’t be lost. Though JA-NL is a standout, other striking characters include Brand-N, whom readers see undergo the Becoming of Age ceremony (an initiation into upper society), and the narrator, who eventually reveals their identity. Bulsara is funny; the international domed nations form the United Federation of City-States (UFoCs), so that the inhabitants are known as UFoCers. Additional signs of satire are much more biting, like celebrity name-dropping and a noticeably dim view on social media (a platform for easily manipulating people into becoming fans of Cyndi). There are also blunt but insightful points on racial discrimination: the Moloch 5000 is a machine that decides a student’s future career and educational path by first scanning said student’s skin color. The novel’s addenda consist of a short but helpful glossary (e.g., dronarazzi, which are essentially paparazzi drones) and a breakdown of the social structure within the story. And notwithstanding the narrator’s assurance to readers that humans are extinct, the ending is not as bleak as some may anticipate.

An entertaining, uncompromising, often farcical near-future tale that revels in pop culture.

Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 04/2019
  • 9781733712569
  • 500 pages
  • $18.95
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