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Michael Kandel

Author of In Between Dragons

13+ Works 313 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Szymon Sokól (Poland, 2005)

Works by Michael Kandel

In Between Dragons (1990) 115 copies, 1 review
Strange Invasion (1989) 78 copies, 1 review
Captain Jack Zodiac (1991) 68 copies, 2 reviews
Panda Ray (1996) 28 copies
A Polish Book of Monsters (2010) — Editor; Translator — 7 copies
Nest of Worlds 5 copies, 1 review
Time to Go 2 copies
Poor Guy 2 copies
Space Opera 2 copies
Hooking Up 1 copy
Mayhem Tours 1 copy

Associated Works

The Mind's I: Fantasies and Reflections on Self and Soul (1981) — Translator, some editions — 3,011 copies, 23 reviews
The Cyberiad (1965) — Translator, some editions — 2,940 copies, 48 reviews
The Futurological Congress (1974) — Translator, some editions — 2,062 copies, 38 reviews
This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen (1948) — Translator, some editions — 1,804 copies, 37 reviews
The Star Diaries (1957) — Translator, some editions — 1,557 copies, 32 reviews
The Street of Crocodiles (1934) — Foreword, some editions — 1,210 copies, 37 reviews
Black Thorn, White Rose (1994) — Contributor — 1,201 copies, 12 reviews
Memoirs Found in a Bathtub (1961) — Translator, some editions — 1,159 copies, 20 reviews
Fiasco (1987) — Translator, some editions — 983 copies, 25 reviews
Mortal Engines (1977) — Translator, some editions — 932 copies, 15 reviews
A Perfect Vacuum (1971) — Translator, some editions — 723 copies, 9 reviews
Peace on Earth (1986) — Translator, some editions — 613 copies, 6 reviews
The Space Opera Renaissance (2007) — Contributor — 304 copies, 6 reviews
The Horns of Elfland (1997) — Contributor — 133 copies, 2 reviews
Stanislaw Lem's The Seventh Voyage: A Graphic Novel (2019) — Translator — 93 copies, 6 reviews
Moving House Stories: Stories (1991) — Translator, some editions — 61 copies
Welcome to Dystopia: 45 Visions of What Lies Ahead (2017) — Contributor — 38 copies, 5 reviews
Simulations: 15 Tales of Virtual Reality (1993) — Contributor — 26 copies
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction August 1999, Vol. 97, No. 2 (1999) — Contributor — 14 copies, 1 review
Thrilling Wonder Stories - Summer 2007 (2007) — Contributor — 12 copies, 1 review
The Seventh Voyage: Stanislaw Lem (Penguin Archive) (2025) — Translator, some editions — 11 copies
Tale of the Computer That Fought a Dragon [short story] (1964) — Translator, some editions — 6 copies
How Erg the Self-Inducting Slew a Paleface [short story] (1964) — Translator, some editions — 6 copies
Crank! Science Fiction and Fantasy: Issue #6 (1996) — Contributor — 3 copies
The Seventh Voyage [short story] (1964) — Translator — 1 copy
Amazing Stories Vol. 72, No. 2 [Summer 2000] (2000) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1941
Gender
male
Occupations
editor
Places of residence
Long Island, New York, New York, USA
Map Location
USA

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
Marek Huberath is a Polish physicist and author of seven books, to date. 'Nest of Worlds' is his first English-language publication, so I read it mainly out of curiosity as to what people over in Poland are reading!

There are some very interesting ideas here but I felt that structurally, the novel had some problems - which is ironic, considering that it's a novel largely about theoretical structures.

The first half of the book concentrates on the story of a couple who have to make a show more significant journey to travel to a new land. Due to oppressive regulations and strange time-dilation effects (which I freely admit did not make sense to me), in order to remain together, the husband travels by a kind of plane (a day's journey) while the wife takes a four-year journey by ship, in order to arrive at the same time. In the new land, the social structure is different. In both lands, status is determined by hair color. While previously, blondes were at the top of the heap, in the new land they are nothing but chattel, with no legal rights at all.
This first part of the book concentrates on talking about the randomness of social stratification and explores the psychological issues caused by such random classifications. A lot of it seems to be an allegory of fascism and oppressive governments in Eastern Europe.

It's mentioned, almost in passing at first, that a minor character is obsessed with reading a book he's found, called 'Nest of Worlds.' He mentions that he can't finish the book because every time he starts reading it, the pages are different - but pretty much everyone assumes he's having a mental breakdown.

In the second half of the book, a new and very random element causes the book to shift focus completely. Everyone who's had contact with our main character, (Gavein aka David), starts dying. Gavein has alibis, and is not suspected of being a murderer - but still, it seems that in some way, he is Death. When the authorities figure this out, of course, they want to investigate and stop the deaths in some way.

Around here, the narrative starts to be intercut with random stories of people living in other worlds altogether. We learn that these stories are found in the previously-mentioned book, 'Nest of Worlds.' First, the book is passed on to the punk-rock, nose-picking physics student who seems to become obsessed with it as well. Then, the obsession passes on to David, who reads the physics student's notes about the many stories contained in the book and how, using mathematics, he extrapolates from the book the structure of the universe and the many worlds contained within it.

As I said, the ideas are interesting and clever (and there isn't room here to really mention all of them). (It's cute how the theory allows for the existence of our world, as well.) I feel like I might've gotten more out of it if I were more versed in physics. But: I didn't feel like the first half and second half of the book meshed together well; the other-worlds stories were also a bit too choppy and random; and the 'notes' on 'Nest of Worlds' were stuck in, in such a way that I felt that the author failed to work all his ideas into the narrative, so had to stick in 'explanations.'

Stylistically, the book 'felt' like something written in the late 60's or 70's; I was surprised to see that it was first published as late as 1998. (I think the style is inherent to the book, not a translation artifact, because I've also read Michael Kandel's translation of Andrzej Sapkowski's work, which has a completely different style.)

I was reminded a bit of Christopher Priest's 'Inverted World,' at times. I do think fans of the one would enjoy the other. It also brought 'Flatland' to mind.

Thanks to NetGalley for the opportunity to read this interesting work! As always, my opinions are my own.
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A bizarre but incredibly entertaining political satire sci-fi. If you can parse non-chronological storytelling, you'll have a blast.

Don't recommend putting it down for too long and picking it up again later, though. Helps to read it in a short time period.
The plot sounded interesting... a series of worlds culled from the books within a magical library, where knights battle dragons and every new book is a new adventure waiting to be explored.

The chapters I managed to finish involved much jumping around, not much in the way of a plot, and skipping ahead to the end of the book revealed a not-so-spectacular ending. Did not finish.
½
This is a little known (outside of avid Science Fiction readers) and excellent book that pre-dates "The Matrix" by some number of years. Imagine "The Matrix" with Robin Williams, Carol Kane and Richard Pryor instead of Reeves, Moss and Fishburn and you have the beginnings of a clue as to what a wonderful time you will have reading this book.

Kandel started out translating Stanislaw Lem's books into English. Although only vaguely similar to Lem's writings, Kandel's books have the same degree show more of intelligence and wit. show less

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Statistics

Works
13
Also by
26
Members
313
Popularity
#75,400
Rating
4.0
Reviews
5
ISBNs
8
Languages
1

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