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John Joseph McGuire (1917–1981)

Author of Four Day Planet [and] Lone Star Planet

14+ Works 737 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

Works by John Joseph McGuire

Four Day Planet [and] Lone Star Planet (1958) — Author — 276 copies
The Worlds of H. Beam Piper (1983) — Author — 171 copies, 2 reviews
Lone Star Planet (1958) — Author — 104 copies, 2 reviews
Null-ABC (1953) — Author — 38 copies, 1 review
The Return (2006) — Author — 21 copies
Hunter Patrol [short story] (1959) — Author — 20 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Empire (1981) — Contributor — 359 copies, 2 reviews
Star Science Fiction Stories No. 6 (1959) — Contributor — 89 copies, 1 review
The H. Beam Piper Megapack (2013) — Contributor — 53 copies, 2 reviews
The Best Science Fiction Stories and Novels: Ninth Series (2024) — Contributor — 39 copies, 1 review
Astounding Science Fiction 1953 02 (1953) — Contributor — 13 copies
Fantastic Universe March 1957 (1957) — Contributor — 5 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
McGuire, John Joseph
Legal name
McGuire, John Joseph
Birthdate
1917-08-25
Date of death
1981-08-01
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Altoona, Pennsylvania, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Pennsylvania, USA

Members

Reviews

12 reviews
So, I can tell what Piper wrote and what he didn't. I've enjoyed the short stories of his I've read before (Oomphel earlier this month, Omnilingual last month), he's clearly sour towards most government, in such an enjoyable way and approach. The parts where I started to get drowsy-eyed were totally not his voice. So. Mr. McGuire, rest your soul, not a big fan of yours. The premise is that a bunch of Texans went and colonised a planet, turning it into a nostalgic parody of Texas-ness. And show more there are canine-based aliens. Some gunfights. Interesting political intrigue. Piper is kind of hilarious. show less
More of a novella than a novel, it was later published as A Planet for Texans with the additional author of J. J. McGuire. I cannot speak to the novel, but I thoroughly enjoyed the novella. The exaggerated Texan culture on New Texas could be extrapolated from the current traditional one. The idea that any politician was fair game for assassination, provided the killer could prove he deserved it, was well-developed. Add in the threat of an alien invasion and the hint of romance and I would show more call the story a romp.

Who would like it? It is traditional science fiction, so folks who like SF would probably like this book, provided they didn't want something serious.
show less
½
A bit of a mediocre "by his bootstraps" type of story. The main character was unpleasant, the plot predictable. Not Piper's best work by any means.
½
Dnf. I found this very hard to follow as an audiobook. There were too many characters and political factions. I didn’t enjoy the politics either.

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Statistics

Works
14
Also by
7
Members
737
Popularity
#34,455
Rating
3.8
Reviews
6
ISBNs
60
Languages
2

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