The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for You
The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for You book cover

The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for You

Price
$16.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
224
Publisher
Random House
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0679778431
Dimensions
5.45 x 0.49 x 8.25 inches
Weight
7.4 ounces

Description

“Truly unforgettable!” — San Francisco Chronicle “A masterful novel . . . a beautiful, symbolic journey of the soul, the journey of a serious dreamer.” — Berkely Monthly From the Inside Flap art love story, part utopian fantasy, part spiritual fable, The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for You is "a beautiful, symbolic journey of the soul" (Berkeley Monthly). Into the world of the Ata comes a desperate man, running from a fast life of fame and fortune, drugs and crime. He is led by the kin of Ata on a spiritual journey that, sooner or later, we all must take. The kin of Ata live only for the dream. Their work, their art, their love are designed in and by their dreams, and their only aim is to dream higher dreams. Into the world of Ata comes a desperate man, who is first subdued and then led on the spiritual journey that, sooner or later, all of us must make. The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for You is part love story, part science fiction, at once Jungian myth and utopian allegory. Dorothy Bryant 's novels and plays use a variety of settings, from the allegorical island of The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for You to her own San Francisco Bay Area ( Ella Price's Journal, Miss Giardino, Confessions of Madame Psyche ), revolutionary ninenteenth-century France ( Dear Master ), and South America ( Anita, Anita ). Her underlying theme is always the same: the struggle of the human spirit to know and become itself. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. One xa0 “Bastard! You son of a bitch! Bastard!” xa0 I was almost bored. She stood in front of me like a woman out of one of my books. I had a sudden thought that I might have invented her: long legs, small waist, full breasts half covered by tossed blonde hair. I must have smiled because she swung at me again. I caught her wrist, and she made a stifled sound of anger, almost a growl. xa0 “Put your clothes on and get out,” I told her. xa0 She went on screaming at me. I sat on the edge of the bed and watched her. Her breasts were full, but they hung loose, like bags over a torso on which I could count every rib. The pubic hair told the true color of her bleached head: mousy brown. Her skin, breaking through her smeared make-up, was blotchy. xa0 “I exist!” she was screaming. “I’m a person!” xa0 I yawned and looked at the clock. Four a.m. “No,” I told her. “I invented you, or you tried to invent yourself, right out of my latest book. But some of the details got …” xa0 She lunged at me. She took me by surprise, and I fell back on the bed with her on top of me. She gave a little jump onto her knees and started digging her fingernails into my face. She almost straddled me, but one knee pressed down on my chest. Her hair and her breasts dangled over my eyes, merging like the slack dugs of some obscene animal. Her breath smelled sour, wine and pot mingling in a sickly smell that turned my stomach. xa0 I tried to grab her wrists, but they were slick with sweat and kept slipping away from me. She was stronger than I expected, and she was hurting me, taking long slashes at my face, aiming at my eyes. xa0 Finally I grabbed her by the shoulders and stretched her away from me at arms length. Her fingernails clawed the air an inch from my nose. I pushed, and she landed against the wall behind the bed, making a couple of thick slapping noises as she hit the wall, then bouncing back at me, her eyes and mouth wide, her claws flailing. As she fell toward me, I stretched out my arm and caught her by the throat. xa0 It wouldn’t have happened if we hadn’t been stoned. And if it hadn’t been four o’clock in the morning. And if it hadn’t been for the nightmare. But the nightmare had been especially bad that week, and I’d had hardly any sleep, trying to keep it from me. xa0 It didn’t feel like murder. It was all unreal, like a scene from one of my books. Or she was like a phantom from my nightmare, the phantom I held off with my eyes closed, afraid to look, I wasn’t real either. Nothing could be real at four o’clock in the morning. I might wake up anytime, sweating and shaking, and take another pill to push me to a level beyond or below nightmare. xa0 It had been quiet for a long time when I gradually came to myself. The first thing I realized was that I was cold. Then I felt the ache in my outstretched arm. I looked down my arm to where my hand gripped her throat, pressing her against the wall. My arm ached because she was heavy, hanging in my grip like a wet doll. Her eyes and mouth were still wide, but her face was dark, and she was quiet. I let go and she slid down the wall, crouched as if she would sit resting against it, then toppled over to one side. I could tell by the way she lay there that she was dead. There was something inhuman, deadlike, in the way her body crumpled. xa0 I looked at the clock: 4:15. Was that all? I thought a lifetime must have passed. It had, of course. In those few minutes, my lifetime, all that my life was, had passed away, had died with … it took me a few minutes to remember her name … with Connie. xa0 But I wasn’t thinking of my life, past or future. If I was thinking at all, it was of escape, of running away. And that wasn’t really thinking. It was instinct. Pure panic vibrated through my knees, widening the huge, windy void at the center of my body. xa0 I put my clothes on. I ran out to the garage, got into my car, and drove off. xa0 I didn’t know where I was going. I had some idea of getting far away before the sun came up, before the light shone through the glass doors at the end of my bedroom, and lit up the brittle blonde hair falling over the bloated face that leaned against the baseboard. xa0 That part of me saw the body. That part of me drove. xa0 Another part of me stood off watching, and after a while that second part of me started to talk. You fool. You did it now. You had everything. You had everything you always wanted. You were at the top. There was nothing left that you could want. And you threw it away. xa0 I shook my head and turned onto the freeway. Going south. That was all right. Going somewhere. Anywhere. Going away. xa0 Don’t run away, the other part of me said. Go back. Take the body and dump it somewhere. xa0 You read too many of your own books. (Was it another part of me, arguing? How many ways was I split?) You’ve been seen with her. People know. You don’t go anywhere without being recognized. They’d connect it with you. xa0 “All right, that’s why you pay a lawyer. Call Spanger. He’s gotten you out of messes before. Temporary insanity. Get your psychiatrist in on it. He can tell about the nightmares. You’re a sick man. xa0 A killer or sick. All the same. It’s over. You had it all and threw it away. Now they won’t read your books anymore, they’ll read you, in the morning paper, every stupid voyeur who ever masturbated to your books will take you with his morning coffee and lick his lips. xa0 Where are you going to go? xa0 Did you bring any money? xa0 How far Can you get without more gas? xa0 The nagging voices buzzed like flies around my body. My silent body answered nothing, thought nothing. It heard without listening and kept driving. xa0 I don’t remember turning off the freeway. I don’t remember the road I took to the mountain. I don’t remember the ascent. There was nothing but the whining voices inside me and the still, stolid body driving. xa0 I don’t remember the curve. xa0 It was only when the car began to roll over, when my body driving it no longer drove it, that I realized I’d turned too sharply, skidded, and gone off the edge of the road. xa0 It all happened with incredible slowness. The car shuddered on the edge, then rolled over. I gripped the wheel as my foot lost the pedal and my head bounced against the roof. For one eternal second the car floated through the air. Then it hit, bouncing on its side, shattering the windows, rattling like tin cans on gravel. Then it rolled, and rolled, grating and scraping, rolling, as within the car I spun and crashed like cargo broken loose, until I saw the broken door fly off and felt myself bounced through the opening into space. xa0 I remember that moment when the car spewed me out, that moment of floating in space. It was in that instant that I first realized I might die, in that instant that my whole being unified into the realization of my own death, not as a theoretical possibility or a far distant probability, not as a word unimagined or repressed, but as a palpable thing, a permanent state. My death. I knew, not with the blind panic of my flight from Connie’s death, but with a clear and rational fear that burst on me like the bright sunlight dawning on that mountainside. I knew that my death would be a permanent plunge into the nightmare. I heard myself scream, not in fear of what might happen, but in the sure horror of knowing. xa0 I had never screamed before. It was not a scream, but more like a great howl into which my falling body melted. And then the nightmare swallowed me. xa0 My eyes are shut. I am surrounded by shadowy shapes. They close in. I must fight them off. But I must not look at them. How can I fight if I can’t see them? I must run, but they are all around me. I might run into the grasp of one. Don’t look at them. They are closer. I feel their breath on me. I throw out my arms to hold them off. But they will swallow my hands. I spin around with my arms outstretched, clearing a safe circle around me. I turn and turn, I spin so the shadows cannot come closer, faster, so they cannot catch my hands. I make a great wind circling round me. I spin, faster and faster until I am dizzy. I am dizzy. I am falling. I fall. I fall, and they are on me. They have me. xa0 My eyes opened. I was not dead. It was all just another nightmare. The murder, the drive, the accident, all a refinement on the old nightmare. For a while I lay still, breathing deeply, gratefully. I did not want to move. In a moment, I would roll over, look at the clock and take another pill. But not yet. I wanted to lie still and safe, in my own bed, in my house. In a moment I would sit up and laugh and write down my dream for the psychiatrist. It was a good one. He would dig into it like a kid making mud pies. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for You
  • is part love story, part science fiction, at once Jungian myth and utopian allegory.
  • “Truly unforgettable!”—
  • San Francisco Chronicle
  • The kin of Ata live only for the dream. Their work, their art, their love are designed in and by their dreams, and their only aim is to dream higher dreams. Into the world of Ata comes a desperate man, who is first subdued and then led on the spiritual journey that, sooner or later, all of us must make.
  • “A masterful novel . . . a beautiful, symbolic journey of the soul, the journey of a serious dreamer.”—
  • Berkely Monthly

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(319)
★★★★
25%
(133)
★★★
15%
(80)
★★
7%
(37)
-7%
(-38)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Have you read this Berkeley author yet? You must.

Dorothy Bryant, who hales from the planet Berkeley, has written several novels that are so startlingly different from each other than it makes you wonder how one person could have achieved this feat.
I don't like fantasy genre books, not at all. But just because Bryant had written this, I swallowed hard and read it. Oh boy. It's wonderful. It's the tale of a wretched man who seems to have killed not only his girlfriend but also himself. But he rouses from his `swoon' in a strange world where there are no signs of ugliness or violence - and the rest of the novel plays with the question of how he will fare in such an unfamiliar environment.
I strongly recommend three of her other books. The Garden of Eros (a personal favorite; I'm a midwife, and there's a fantastic description of an unattended birth in this book), Miss Giardino, and Ella Price's Journal. Dorothy Bryant created her own publishing company, Ata Books, in Berkeley because of her desire to help local writers get published and to keep their books in print and on local bookstore shelves indefinitely.
67 people found this helpful
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Unforgetable Utopian Tale

I read THE KIN OF ATA almost twenty years ago and have given many copies away as gifts. I adore this story and have read it numerous times. It is important to note that the first two or three pages are NOT what this book is about. This book is about what is possible in each and every one of us, even the proud and arrogant. The images of Ata bring me great comfort (The Comforter was it's original title); the "holkas" for healing, the sleeping wheels, the spiraling wall with shells for collecting drinking water, the great cone shaped gathering hall, the bowls of food for feeding one another...
For anyone interested in social responsibility, spiritual growth, the power of dreams or even parapsychology, I highly recommend that you buy this book, read it and pass it on to your best friend.
20 people found this helpful
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WOW !!! 10 STARS !!!

This is my absolutly favorite book! I have read it several times since the early nineties. It will blow your mind, which I think is just what we need sometimes. I picked it up out of curiosity many years ago and WOW ! This original copy (with the tree/butterfly) doesn't have the blurb on the back which kind of ruins this later edition. Definitely a keeper. What an extraordinary book and author. I love all her work.

There is some violence but one soon realizes it was necessary, a look at our 'civilized' world, but then.... :))))))

I have bought and continue to buy copies for my friends, as I again do today for another friend. Only my best friends. :)

Hopefully a reprint with the original art cover will come out again. I'll buy a stock!
19 people found this helpful
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Kin of Ata review

You will not regret reading this excellent book. I have bought this book four times because I have given copies to friends who have in turn bought copies for friends. I am an aspiring author and an avid reader. This is the best book I have ever read. It has changed my life and continues to remind me of what is really important in life. This book has some magic in store for you. Please read it and realize your potential as a better human being.
19 people found this helpful
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beautiful, but preaches mostly to the converted

It is a lovely book... somewhat surreal and definitely Utopian in theme but Bryant takes you so gently and slowly to her thesis that it's ultimately easy-to-swallow. Reflection over time, however, yields a few problems.

As another reviewer has pointed out, Bryant uses a dispicable character to explain and augment the premise for the culture of Ata; many readers will find it hard to sympathize with his supposed enlightenment. Also, the id is completely glossed over in this book, the idea being that proper socialization within such a Utopian culture would erase or negate animalistic urges down to permanently manageable magnitude; many readers will question her conclusion in that regard and doubts will emerge on the entire premise. Lastly, the protagonists obtuse nature makes the book plod a bit; many readers will "get it" right away and be annoyed with how long it takes the main character to catch up (which in some respects he never really does)

Then there's the attitude of the Kin of Ata themselves. While beautiful and loving and empathic and yadda yadda, they can easily come across as lackadaisical or just plain apathetic. While much is made of their near-telepathic "oneness" and reliance upon their spiritual nature, their repeated indulgence of the main character becomes tiresome.... have they no self-preservation? No passion? No overriding discipline? These questions are best exemplified by the fact that the Ata see no benefit from the notion of the written word. Much is made of their connection to one another; their oral history that becomes the art of storytelling etc. Apparently, historical fact-keeping is anathema to Utopia. I found that notion to be impossible to accept. Within the framework of a people absolutely cut-off from "modern" societies influence perhaps that could MAYBE be true, but one does not simply dismiss an obstacle to spiritual awakening by pushing it out of view. This comes across as a basic ostrich manuever to avoid facing the difficult realities of human natures: heirarchical thinking, competiveness and basic surivival needs that when unmet turn to aggression and antagonistic behavior. Those may not be pleasant realities but they are realities.

For a more interesting (and possibly more intellectual) take on the same notion, try out Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Although her victorian attitudes about female sexuality date the piece, all other aspects of her Utopia seem more plausible to me. Which is saying something, really.

Actually, I'd be more enthusiastic to recommend The Dispossessed (or nearly anything by Ursula K LeGuin) or Wild Seed (or nearly anything by Octavia Butler) as both (the books and the writers) explore the notion of a Utopian ideal by handing it to humanity via an alien race who are well aware of the not-so-nice aspects of human nature. Both writers understand that some unsavory elements are iron-clad stuck in us, not just taught to us.

By keeping the Utopianists as human as anyone else, we beg the question "why do those humans never fight, never hurt each other and how would they deal with a natural disaster?" which never seems to be answered by Utopian writers adequately. By beginning enlightenment with an outside species/race, we change the question to "can humanity resist its negative tendancies in order to accept this Utopia?" which is imminently more interesting and quite possibly answerable on some level.

The Kin of Ata... neither addresses nor firmly answers these questions, which is it's only flaw. For fantasy, however, it sure is a wonderful read.
15 people found this helpful
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"Kin of Ata" is new age fiction at its best

This is the book I've been longing to find: A gem of a story that's been waiting for rediscovery as new age fiction. Dorothy Bryant's 1971 novel, originally promoted as science fiction, is described as "part love story, part science fiction, and at once Jungian myth and utopian allegory." But by today's standards, it's a straightforward exploration of connecting to the highest and best parts of ourselves and living according to that guidance.

Story: The kin of Ata live only for the dream. Their work, their art, their love are designed in and by their dreams, and their only aim is to dream higher dreams. Into the world of Ata comes a desparate man, who is first subdued and then led on the spiritual journey that, sooner or later, all of us must make (back cover).

Spiritual/metaphysical content: Very high. Berkley Monthly called the novel "a beautiful, symbolic journey of the soul," but there's very little about it that's symbolic when read as new age fiction. Here's my description of the story: When a famous writer hits bottom, he wakes up in what appears to be a simple commune from the Sixties that practices all the fundamental truths of most religious, spiritual, and self-help philosophies: Life in the moment. Connect with your higher self/guide/God for guidance. You cannot judge good or bad, right or wrong, true or false; truth is relative. You cannot heal the mind without also addressing the body and spirit, and much more. In addition, the book is compatible with Christian beliefs (at least the more modern interpretations of the Bible). As the man learns more about the kin of Ata, he realizes what a complex, spiritually advanced group they are despite-or perhaps because of-their seeming simplicity. The people of Ata live in a way that is free of sin, guilt, exclusion, worry, and pain, and yet is joyful, productive, and satisfying both in body and spirit.

My take: This is a well-written, lyrical novel that exemplifies new age fiction at perhaps its finest. Although the book is quite short, the plot is strong and compelling, and we come to love the characters and yearn for their success. Although clearly utopian, the story proposes an integrated vision of a future that is both functional and inspirational.

I loved this book. Part of its allure is its depth; it can be read at multiple levels: as an intriguing trifle of sci-fi/fantasy, an introduction to broader spiritual principles, or an insightful analysis of some of modern society's ills and how new age/metaphysical thought can not only ease the many sufferings of our world but also provide a model of sustainable growth and development. Please don't get me wrong-at heart, this is a relatively simple book, but it contains profound insights for spiritual growth. And best of all, it's an easy, entertaining read. Entertain and educate-the perfect combination for new age fiction.

The title confounds me a bit because it sheds very little light on what the book is actually about; the back cover description suffers from this shortcoming as well. I suspect that it was a marketing decision in 1971 to promote a book that so clearly had literary value but fell into no recognizable genre (again, a case for the genre for new age fiction). In today's market, the title does the reader a disservice by not indicating the spiritual depth of the novel. As with Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, that may have been the price for getting published nearly forty years ago. Interestingly, the book was originally published in 1971 under the title The Comforter, which again seems unrelated to what the book is actually about. I am researching Dorothy Bryant's other novels for similar themes; Confessions of Madame Psyche looks interesting.
14 people found this helpful
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LIFE-CHANGING!

Life-changing book! I loved the central premise of the book so much that I've written at least three articles on Medium.Com that are inspired by the book. In fact, the second article is a book review of three books that have been deeply impactful for me. I've included THIS book as one of them!

Note that this book is Visionary Fiction as powerfully transformative as Paulo Coelho's "The Alchemist" or James Redfield's "The Celestine Prophecy". If you like any of those books, you will enjoy this book!

Here's the central premise (and two questions to live by every day):

“How can I live today so that I have beautiful dreams tonight?”

“How can I infuse this day with the magic of the powerful beautiful dreams I have already had?”
11 people found this helpful
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A SECOND CHANCE DANCE...

This is an allegorical tale that provides food for thought, as the reader accompanies one man on his journey to redemption. The man is question is a deeply flawed one, driven by many of the seven sins. When he kills his girl friend and flees in his car, he has what would appear to be a fatal accident. Instead, he mysteriously finds himself in the land of Ata. Thus, begins this fantastical Utopian tale.

The book is simply written and chronicles one man's entry into a world where the dream state is reality. It is a world where unconditional acceptance of others prevails, and symbolically all are spokes in the circular wheel of life. Much of the book is redolent of Christian ideals. How much of Ata is in this man's mind and how much of it is truly real, I leave to the individual reader to discern. It is comforting to think, however, that the kin of Ata just may be waiting for you.
11 people found this helpful
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Mixed feelings about this mostly great book

I was very psyched to read this book and was thrilled to have been given it as a gift. I thought the idea of the Atan culture and the people of Ata were amazing- so many good ideas about how to create a happy, well-run society with value and love for every diverse person.
I agree with the many reviewers who urge people to read this book for a life-changing, or at least a perspective-broadening experience. I think we can all learn valuable lessons from the wonderful people of Ata. For a similar type of story, I also recommend Marlo Morgan's Mutant Message Down Under.
My main critique of the story is that it is told through the eyes of a lying, thieving, raping, sexist, murdering, privileged, white man, and though he supposedly was changed by his experience on Ata, I never could grow to like him or develop any empathy for him. He later forms a "relationship" with a woman, Augustine, on Ata and I could not bring myself to believe that the characters really shared any love. It seemed like Augustine just went along with whatever the raping, thieving, slime-bucket guy wanted. I wondered about that aspect of Augustine's character and what the author intended to convey by portraying her that way.
Perhaps I need to read it again and ponder that, as well as the question of why Ms. Bryant chose such a reprehensible main character to tell her fascinating story. Read it for yourself and see if you find the answers.
11 people found this helpful
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Just imagine!

This book will always hold a place in my heart. It's more than the story, it's the concept of incorporating our dreams into our living. I have come to understand that there are really cultures who do this. Imagine! Imagine taking our dreams seriously enough to be able to use them to solve the myriad of problems facing us in this world. Imagine believing that dreams are more than individualized unconscious activity, that they have the potential to be utilized collectively to make decisions that as a society can move us forward, from Armageddon to Hope! Just imagine!
10 people found this helpful