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Ladataan... Dealing in Futures (vuoden 1985 painos)Tekijä: Joe Haldeman (Tekijä)
TeostiedotDealing in Futures (tekijä: Joe Haldeman)
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Kirjaudu LibraryThingiin nähdäksesi, pidätkö tästä kirjasta vai et. Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. I five-starred this book on the strength of one story, 'A !tangled web', which I think is probably my favourite sf short. It's about dubious trading practices amongst humans and how they can come unstuck when they come up against alien species. The !tang are quite memorable, being biologically eccentric, witty (in a dry, 'please excuse my native simplicity [yeah, right]' way) and have a delightful way of avoiding difficult questions by veering the conversation off into an elaborate, death-related metaphor which always ends with the words "All die. O the embarrassment." näyttää 3/3 ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
Sisältää nämä:A !Tangled Web [novelette] (tekijä: Joe Haldeman) Seasons [novella] (tekijä: Joe Haldeman) The Big Bang Theory Explained (tekijä: Joe Haldeman) Saul's Death [poem] (tekijä: Joe Haldeman) The Gift [poem] (tekijä: Joe Haldeman) You Can Never Go Back [novella] (tekijä: Joe Haldeman) Manifest Destiny (tekijä: Joe Haldeman) Blood Sisters (tekijä: Joe Haldeman) Blood Brothers (tekijä: Joe Haldeman) No Future In It (tekijä: Joe Haldeman) The Pilot [short story] (tekijä: Joe Haldeman)
Joe Haldeman is a Vietnam veteran whose classic novels The Forever War and Forever Peace both have the rare honor of winning the Hugo and Nebula Awards. He has served twice as president of the Science Fiction Writers of America and is currently an adjunct professor teaching writing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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It starts off strong with two stories set in Haldeman's Confederacion universe, most notably used in his novel All My Sins Remembered. A team of anthropologists are unpleasantly surprised when their seemingly peaceful alien subjects become murderous. Haldeman constructs a grim, suspenseful story from the first person narratives of people fleeing for their lives across an alien world. Much less serious is "A !Tangled Web" about linguistic and cultural confusions during a trade negotiation with aliens. These aliens have an elaborate and hilarious repertoire of self-deprecating phrases.
Haldeman's prose often has wit and irony in even his most serious novels but that aspect of his work really livens up "Seven and the Stars" despite its worn plot of a science fiction writer meeting a real alien.
Horror of the traditional and supernatural sort is featured in "Manifest Destiny", an interesting tale mostly set in Mexico during the Mexican-American War, and "Lindsay and the Red City Cross". The latter is set in the unpleasant, sinister bazaar of Djemaa El Fna in Marrakesh. The story was inspired by an unpleasant trip Haldeman took to Morocco though his luck there was obviously better than his protagonist.
Though inspired by Poe and, in a roundabout way Daniel Keyes' classic "Flowers for Algernon, "More Than the Sum of His Parts" is high-tech, rather than traditional, horror. The narrator's body is mostly replaced with cybernetic substitutes which help him realize his egomaniac and increasingly lethal fantasies. Haldeman's alternate title, "Tom Swift and His Electric Penis" should give you some idea where this story goes. It's one of the high points of the collection.
Pastiches of other genres show up twice. "Blood Sisters" is a Mickey Spillane type story with the Mafia and clones and, of course, lots of sex and gunplay. "Blood Brothers" is Haldeman's sole entry into the sword-and-sorcery field. Written for Robert Asprin's Thieve's World universe, it's a minor story about a villainous tavern owner.
For Haldeman fans, the most interesting story will probably be "You Can Never Go Back". It's Haldeman's first draft of the story that eventually became the Sergeant Mandella section of his most celebrated work, The Forever War. It's not only longer than the novel version but features a violent, more depressing America and different family details for Mandella and Potter. Haldeman likes this version better though he admits that it would have slowed the novel down too much.
Unfortunately, the last two stories in the collection are minor. "No Future in It" is a gimmicky alternate history/time travel story which leaves out the meat of an alternate history story: why things changed. "The Pilot" is about a cyborg starship that gets really annoyed with tv interviewers.
As with his most recent short story collection, None So Blind, Haldeman finishes the book off with some of his accomplished verse, here three science fiction story poems. Each entry in the collection features an introduction and afterword by Haldeman explaining the origins and inspirations of the stories. ( )