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Loading... Federationsby John Joseph Adams
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Good collection. I read most. It's nice being able to pick and choose. ( )Federations is a bit of an odd duck. Or an odd hybrid duck, even. A mixture of new stories, and reprint stories. The introduction says it is inspired by a Star Trek and Star Wars childhood, but the editor has moved on beyond there - and this will show the tropes of interstellar fiction. So keeping the Federations name is a little odd. The book is decent, but only of a reasonable original anthology standard. There are some good reprints - e.g. Orson Scott Card in his non-bad mode. There are those that are minor, with Alastair Reynolds worst story I think. Certainly no strategy here of finding the best reprints, by any stretch. New stories - veterans like Allen M. Steele who turn in an ok Coyote story, but are certainly capable of better. Jeremy Tolbert delivers an inventive tale. Some of the new work is very slight, though, particularly the shorter stories. Gilbow, for example, and Li. Apart from being mediocre, those thinking they were getting Star Trekking on buying the book may find themselves launching the volume into space, perhaps to collide with large dumb objects like architectural support. There are a couple of poor stories. The sub-par Bradford piece of alien arrivable would be completely disposable and forgettable in 1947. Catherynne Valente is certainly far more talented than the extremely limited types like the Bradfords, Andersons, Gilbows, Hergenraders and Lis could ever hope to be. However, even she belabors the point in her story to where the bouquet becomes tiresome. There are a couple of spoof type pieces to break things up, too, which is good. Space cadet hamsters, even. Probably not unreasonable to mention The New Space Opera as a volume of interest to people that are getting this book - and people other than me will likely do so - you would have to suggest that if you could only get one, get one of the Dozois books. If you have a liking for this sort of thing, it is still worth a look, and worth supporting anthologies along these lines as they aren't common. Less common than the magical cat variety, perhaps. Definitely way better than those, however. The other great thing is it is multiformat, usable by anyone, anywhere, anytime. Prime are to be commended for being reader friendly. If you have a choice between this and an equivalent work from a DRM-infested, geolocked overcharging publishers who assumes you are likely a thief then give Prime or their counterparts your money. Go and read the other for free in a bookshop, or a library, or some other method. Federations : Mazer in Prison - Orson Scott Card Federations : Carthago Delenda Est - Genevieve Valentine Federations : Life-Suspension - L. E. Modesitt Federations : Terra-Exulta - S. L. Gilbow Federations : Aftermaths - Lois McMaster Bujold Federations : Someone is Stealing the Great Throne Rooms of the Galaxy - Harry Turtledove Federations : Prisons - Kevin J. Anderson and Doug Beason Federations : Different Day - K. Tempest Bradford Federations : Twilight of the Gods - John C. Wright Federations : Warship - George R. R. Martin and George Guthridge Federations : Swanwatch - Yoon Ha Lee Federations : Spirey and the Queen - Alastair Reynolds Federations : Pardon Our Conquest - Alan Dean Foster Federations : Symbiont - Robert Silverberg Federations : The Ship Who Returned - Anne McCaffrey Federations : My She - Mary Rosenblum Federations : The Shoulders of Giants - Robert J. Sawyer Federations : The Culture Archivist - Jeremiah Tolbert Federations : The Other Side of Jordan - Allen Steele Federations : Like They Always Been Free - Georgina Li Federations : Eskhara - Trent Hergenrader Federations : The One with the Interstellar Group Consciousnesses - James Alan Gardner Federations : Golubash or Wine-War-Blood-Elegy - Catherynne M. Valente Put the kid in charge of the search, or I'm pissing off, and you are Buggered. 4 out of 5 Delegate message wait. 3 out of 5 Snow woman space pilot revival. 3.5 out of 5 Grimpting formation. 3 out of 5 Dead Barrayan space pickup, no necrophilia. 3.5 out of 5 Hamster space cadet to the rescue. 3.5 out of 5 Warden, we're permanently revolting. 3.5 out of 5 Alien multi-deals. 2.5 out of 5 Ring Gap Into Madness. 3.5 out of 5 Diseased and down to the hologram. Cleanout needed. 3.5 out of 5 Black hole dive tune. 3.5 out of 5 'Space war is godawful slow.' Everything is also not as it seems in this conflict, partly as a result of the above. 3 out of 5 We lost we war, or that's what they tell us. 4 out of 5 Mate killing double deal final finish. 4 out of 5 Prosthetic palsy. 3 out of 5 Speaker monopoly. 3 out of 5 Slowship 0. Fastship 1. World already populated. Ship's co-captains petulant, decide to piss off to another galaxy. 3.5 out of 5 Humpty survival UP ex-bad guy Swarm sneak. 4 out of 5 Leaving Coyote love letters. 3.5 out of 5 Boy kiss. 2.5 out of 5 Seditionist siege planet. 3.5 out of 5 The Union of matchmake is on the rise. 3 out of 5 Transport war vintage. 3 out of 5 http://notfreesf.blogspot.com/2009/04...
But stories set in an interstellar space filled with competing civilizations have long played a part in SF of all kinds, whether it's found on a big screen, a little screen, or in the pages of a book. That's the kind of science fiction celebrated in Federations, and the stories collected therein do a good job of illustrating just how wide a range of stories can be built around such a common theme.
References to this work on external resources.
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