Will the Last Person to Leave the Planet Please Shut Off the Sun?
by Mike Resnick
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A collection of science fiction stories features Revolt of the Sugar Plum Fairies, The Light That Binds, the Claws That Catch, the title story, and the Hugo Award-winning Kirinyaga.Tags
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Mike Resnick is a prolific science fiction novelist, a distinguished SF anthologist, and the author of tales about the galaxy’s deadliest assassin, its finest brothel, its most powerful telepath, and its only traveling carnival. You might suspect that he’d also be capable of writing highly polished short stories that span an astonishing variety of subjects and moods. You’d be right, and Will the Last Person to Leave the Planet Please Shut Off the Sun? is proof of it.
Many of the stories that make up the collection fit into one or another of Resnick’s larger fictional projects. Two are from his award-winning Kirinyaga cycle, one is set in the alternate New York City of the John Justin Mallory novels (Stalking the Unicorn and show more sequels), and two are part of a loose series of alternate-history adventures centered on Teddy Roosevelt. Others are one-off tales written for other people’s anthologies, demonstrating Resnick’s penchant for writing “against the grain” of such projects.
Humor abounds – corruption at the elephant-racing track, a bar owner's battle of wits with a bureaucrat, and Robin Hood's mom kvetching about her son -- but this is more than just a collection of funny stories. "Watching Marcia" is a creepy look inside the mind of a stalker-voyeur, "The Last Dog" a moving tale of inter-species friendship, and "Beachcomber" a piece of literary sleight-of-hand that transforms the comic image of a robot half-buried in the beach at Coney Island into a serious meditation on what it means to be human. The last story, "Winter Solstice," is a tale about Merlin and old age: poignant in its own right, and heartbreaking if (having read the author's note) you know what inspired it.
If you're already a fan of Resnick's work, this collection is well worth your time; if you're not, it's an excellent introduction. show less
Many of the stories that make up the collection fit into one or another of Resnick’s larger fictional projects. Two are from his award-winning Kirinyaga cycle, one is set in the alternate New York City of the John Justin Mallory novels (Stalking the Unicorn and show more sequels), and two are part of a loose series of alternate-history adventures centered on Teddy Roosevelt. Others are one-off tales written for other people’s anthologies, demonstrating Resnick’s penchant for writing “against the grain” of such projects.
Humor abounds – corruption at the elephant-racing track, a bar owner's battle of wits with a bureaucrat, and Robin Hood's mom kvetching about her son -- but this is more than just a collection of funny stories. "Watching Marcia" is a creepy look inside the mind of a stalker-voyeur, "The Last Dog" a moving tale of inter-species friendship, and "Beachcomber" a piece of literary sleight-of-hand that transforms the comic image of a robot half-buried in the beach at Coney Island into a serious meditation on what it means to be human. The last story, "Winter Solstice," is a tale about Merlin and old age: poignant in its own right, and heartbreaking if (having read the author's note) you know what inspired it.
If you're already a fan of Resnick's work, this collection is well worth your time; if you're not, it's an excellent introduction. show less
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574+ Works 14,743 Members
Mike Resnick was born on March 5, 1942. He sold his first article in 1957, his first short story in 1959, and his first book in 1962. He attended the University of Chicago from1959 through 1961. Resnick began writing stories under various pseudonyms and churned out more than 200 novels, 300 short stories and 2,000 articles, from1964 through1976. show more He edited 7 different tabloid newspapers and a pair of men's magazines, as well. Beginning with Shaggy B.E.M. Stories in 1988, Resnick has also become an anthology editor, and was nominated for a Best Editor Hugo in 1994 and 1995. His list of anthologies in print and in press totals more than 20. Since 1989, he has won four Hugo Awards, a Nebula Award, and has been nominated for 19 Hugos, eight Nebulas, a Clarke (British), and five Seiun-shos (Japanese). He has also won 10 Homer Awards, an Alexander Award, a Golden Pagoda Award, the Seiun Award (Japanese), a Hayakawa SF Award (Japanese), a Locus Award, an Ignotus Award (Spanish), a Futura Award (Croatian), the Tour Eiffel Award (French), the Prix Ozone (French), two Sfinks Awards and a Fantastyka Award (both Polish), and has topped the S. F. Chronicle Poll six times and the Asimov's Readers Poll twice. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Canonical title
- Will the Last Person to Leave the Planet Please Shut Off the Sun?
- Dedication
- To Carol, as always,
And to the editors:
Gregory Benford
John F. Carr
Gardner Dozois
David Drake
Ross Emry
Bill Fawcett
Ed Ferman
Alan Dean Foster
Martin H... (show all). Greenberg
George Laskowski
Barry Malzberg
Jerry Pournelle
Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Charles Ryan
Dean Wesley Smith
Roy Torgeson
Tony Ubelhor
Lawrence Watt-Evans - First words
- I've got a confession to make.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)I'm frightened.
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