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L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of Future Vol 23

L. Ron Hubbard

L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of Future Vol 23 L. Ron Hubbard Amazon Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 6 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

The best new science fiction and fantasy short stories from up-and-coming writers and every story is illustrated by budding new artists all winners of the annual Illustrators of the Future Contest. Established in 1983 by L. Ron Hubbard expressly for the aspiring writer, Writers of the Future has become the most respected and significant forum for new talent in all aspects of speculative fiction. The elite character of the contest is evident from the roster of judges: Kevin J. Anderson, Doug Beason, Gregory Benford, Algis Budrys, Orson Scott Card, Brian Herbert, Nina Kiriki Hoffman, Eric Kotani, Anne McCaffrey, Larry Niven, Frederik Pohl, Jerry Pournelle, Tim Powers, Robert Silverberg and K.D. Wentworth. In 1988, Mr. Hubbard's vision inspired a contest for new and aspiring illustrators seeking to become speculative fiction artists. The list of judges for the illustrators' contest is no less impressive than that of the writers' contest and represents a virtual who's who of the field including Frank Frazetta, Vincent DiFate, Bob Eggleton, Stephen Hickman and Stephen Youll. Since its inception, the contest has helped place more than two hundred and fifty novels and 2,500 short stories on bookshelves around the world. The Writers of the Future Award has also earned its place alongside the Hugo and Nebula awards in the triad of speculative fiction's most prestigious acknowledgements of literary excellence.

L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future, Vol. 22

L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future, Vol. 22 Amazon Price: $7.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Vol. XXII 4 out of 5 stars.
4 of 5 people found this review helpful.

I have been following the Writers of the Future anthology for years as I find the stories always packed with original thoughts and concepts. This year again, the book contains many imaginative tales. My favorite one is probably "On the Mount" which is about a "god-hunter". What a concept! Other stories that fascinated me likewise are "Evolution's End" about space exploration gone wrong and "The Balancer" where the past and the future is controlled by "Time Balancers".
A great collection of short stories.

Editorial Review:

The L. Ron Hubbard Writers and Illustrators of the Future Contests discover and introduce the very best new talent in science fiction, fantasy and horror, with their entertaining and creative tales of worlds unknown, worlds to be and worlds only dreamed of, as selected by top professionals in these fields. In the past twenty-two years, over 300 telented writers have been newly published - many winners becoming the authors you now enjoy reading. This volume contains the first works by authors who are sure to become equally well known over the years to come.

Michaelmas

Algis J. Budrys

Michaelmas Algis J. Budrys List Price: $1.95
By: Berkley
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Michaelmas the precursor to Cyberpunk 5 out of 5 stars.
8 of 8 people found this review helpful.

So why did this one lapse out of print? This is a book I bought for 95 pence in the UK in 1979, and it wipes the floor with a large number of the 80's Cyberpunk generation output.

Michaelmas is one of the icons of his time, in a more automated but recognisable future that is a backdrop to events, not a substitute. He is one of the faces that report the news; a travelling reporter with enormous cachet and friends throughout the business. He is also the creator of a machine, Domino, which has evolved from a means of getting free trunk calls to his wife into something teetering on the brink of self-awareness. Between them, for all intents and purposes, they run the world; only the world doesn't know it - a benign nudging and manipulation rather than an overt exercise of power.

Then a news report starts engaging Michaelmas in paranoia; a swiss Nobel-prize-winner reports an astronaut believed lost in a shuttle explosion is alive, recovered and sitting in his sanatarium. The politics of space-flight are fully engaged, and as Michaelmas pursues his suspicions through the labyrinth more and more off-key notes are struck.

It's an excellent novel, well ahead of it's time, has a fascinating central character, numerous interesting protagonists, leaves you wanting more, and asking what-if questions for a year or two. If you see it, buy it. If you're in publishing, reprint it.

THE WAR BOOK: The Price; In Passage of the Sun; Game; The Foxholes of Mars; Down the Rabbit Hole; Pacifist; Your Soldier Unto Death; The Weapon; Or Else; The Liberation of Earth; Crab Apple Crisis; The House by the Crab Apple Tree; And Then the Dark

James (editor) (Algis Budrys; George Collyn; Donald Barthelme; Fritz Leiber; Norman Spinrad; Mack Reynolds; Michael Walker; Fredric Brown; Henry Kuttner; William Tenn; George MacBeth; S. S. Johnson) Sallis

THE WAR BOOK: The Price; In Passage of the Sun; Game; The Foxholes of Mars; Down the Rabbit Hole; Pacifist; Your Soldier Unto Death; The Weapon; Or Else; The Liberation of Earth; Crab Apple Crisis; The House by the Crab Apple Tree; And Then the Dark James (editor) (Algis Budrys; George Collyn; Donald Barthelme; Fritz Leiber; Norman Spinrad; Mack Reynolds; Michael Walker; Fredric Brown; Henry Kuttner; William Tenn; George MacBeth; S. S. Johnson) Sallis By: Panther Books
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Falling Torch

Algis Budrys

Falling Torch Algis Budrys List Price: $16.00
By: Vivisphere Publishing
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Story of a man who finds his cause 4 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

Falling Torch is one of those stories that you, or at least I, can connect with. This is due in no small part to the fact that Michael Wireman, the main character is a believable person. He's not superman and he's not Jojo the idiot circus boy. He's just a guy in the right place at the right time. The right ancestry couldn't have hurt. Wireman's the son of the president of the solar system., not that it means much on Alpha Centaur. It seems Earth and the solar system are under "Invader" control. The only thing his father presides over is a government in exile that the centurians could care less about. Then one day the situation changes...

since I didn't see a synopsis provided by Amazon (unusual) I'll copy it down here: Wireman came back to a vanquished Earth on a mission to save it. What he learned was that the guerrillas were corrupt and the average citizen would just as soon be left alone. And he wasn't in very good shape himself.

1991 paperback synopsis

Editorial Review:

The earth had been captured by The Invaders. A generation later, Michael Wireman had come back from the Centaurian colony...and found very little that he expected. For one thing, most Earthmen were perfectly contended. The fighting was between factions of outlaw Earthmen, hidden in the mountains, barely taken note of by the invaders. And Wireman found he didn't like the outlaws. Could he become assimilated by the tame Earthmen? Could he, in other words, surrender?

Entertainment

Algis Budrys

Entertainment Algis Budrys Amazon Price: $12.00
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By: New England Science Fiction Association
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Editorial Review:

This volume presents ten examples of Algis Budrys' shorter fiction highlighting his writing from the middle to late 1950s. These stories include famous ones such as "The End of Summer," "The Burning World," "Silent Brother," and "The Executioner" as well as lesser known gems such as "Contact Between Equals," "Never Meet Again," and "Go and Behold Them." Budrys' European upbringing gives his stories a viewpoint not often seen in those of American or British SF writers. A bibliography of Budrys' fiction, non-fiction books, and selected non-fiction articles is included.

Who?

Algis Budrys

Who? Algis Budrys By: Lancer
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Editorial Review:

Signed by Algis Budrys. Was he a top American scientist, a Soviet spy...or was he even human?

Rogue Moon

Algis J. Budrys

Rogue Moon Algis J. Budrys List Price: $2.25
By: Avon
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 8 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Sci-fi as a character study of men who live dangerously 4 out of 5 stars.
10 of 11 people found this review helpful.

During science fiction's Golden Age, it was almost taken for granted that the characters of sci-fi were the same characters found in fantasy: consummate wizards who could solve any problem, helpless damsels in distress, and intrepid heroes who could slay the toughest dragon. True, the wizard wore a lab coat rather than a pointed hat, and the hero flew a rocket ship instead of riding a white horse, but at essence, they were the same types: flat, flawless, and wholly unbelievable. Budrys explodes the myth in this painfully honest look at what drives the kind of man who would risk his life, and the lives of others, in the name of Science.

Dr Edward Hawks heads a project that, through the miracle of teleportation, puts men on the moon. He does this by transmitting taped copies of human beings across the void, where the men are then reconstructed alive from this data. Communication is handled by an inherent psychic link between the original and his copy. With unique insight, Budrys sees this journey as a one-way trip, since the men so sent are mere duplicates of their earth-side counterparts, with no lives of their very own to come back to. Thus Hawks' machine creates life, but it is life that has no real place in our world.

While exploring the moon, these doomed men have found an inexplicable artifact. Attempts to enter this structure and learn its secrets have always resulted in the demise of the explorer. And staying in constant contact with "themselves" as they die again and again has taken a tragic toll upon even the hardened military men whose avatars are doing the investigating. So Director of Personnel Vincent Connington chooses fearless tough guy adventurer Al Barker for the job. But how will Al react to not just facing death, but actually experiencing it, dying day after day? And what of his beautiful and flirtatious girlfriend Claire, whose coquettish ways threaten to undermine the entire project? If life is this cheap, then how valuable are relationships?

Originally published in the early sixties, perhaps in response to the Nedelin catastrophe in which 126 people were killed on a Soviet launch pad, this short but strangely gripping novel focuses on the people who undertake dangerous ventures, rather than on the science behind this sketchily-drawn quest. The point of view usually lies with Hawks, and his relationships with Al, whom he sends to his death on a daily basis, and Claire, who seems anxious to shatter his inscrutable composure. Fans of whiz-bang science fiction may be disappointed by the fairly weak and dated explanations of the science involved, and the fact that many of the more scientific questions remain unresolved at the end. But despite the outrageousness of the back story, this is a unique, gripping, and very hard-boiled book that takes a hard if somewhat simplistic look at what drives the people who do dangerous work.

Rogue Moon

Algis J. Budrys

Rogue Moon Algis J. Budrys List Price: $2.25
By: Avon
Amazon Marketplace: 12 new & used starting at $3.50

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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 8 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Sci-fi as a character study of men who live dangerously 4 out of 5 stars.
10 of 11 people found this review helpful.

During science fiction's Golden Age, it was almost taken for granted that the characters of sci-fi were the same characters found in fantasy: consummate wizards who could solve any problem, helpless damsels in distress, and intrepid heroes who could slay the toughest dragon. True, the wizard wore a lab coat rather than a pointed hat, and the hero flew a rocket ship instead of riding a white horse, but at essence, they were the same types: flat, flawless, and wholly unbelievable. Budrys explodes the myth in this painfully honest look at what drives the kind of man who would risk his life, and the lives of others, in the name of Science.

Dr Edward Hawks heads a project that, through the miracle of teleportation, puts men on the moon. He does this by transmitting taped copies of human beings across the void, where the men are then reconstructed alive from this data. Communication is handled by an inherent psychic link between the original and his copy. With unique insight, Budrys sees this journey as a one-way trip, since the men so sent are mere duplicates of their earth-side counterparts, with no lives of their very own to come back to. Thus Hawks' machine creates life, but it is life that has no real place in our world.

While exploring the moon, these doomed men have found an inexplicable artifact. Attempts to enter this structure and learn its secrets have always resulted in the demise of the explorer. And staying in constant contact with "themselves" as they die again and again has taken a tragic toll upon even the hardened military men whose avatars are doing the investigating. So Director of Personnel Vincent Connington chooses fearless tough guy adventurer Al Barker for the job. But how will Al react to not just facing death, but actually experiencing it, dying day after day? And what of his beautiful and flirtatious girlfriend Claire, whose coquettish ways threaten to undermine the entire project? If life is this cheap, then how valuable are relationships?

Originally published in the early sixties, perhaps in response to the Nedelin catastrophe in which 126 people were killed on a Soviet launch pad, this short but strangely gripping novel focuses on the people who undertake dangerous ventures, rather than on the science behind this sketchily-drawn quest. The point of view usually lies with Hawks, and his relationships with Al, whom he sends to his death on a daily basis, and Claire, who seems anxious to shatter his inscrutable composure. Fans of whiz-bang science fiction may be disappointed by the fairly weak and dated explanations of the science involved, and the fact that many of the more scientific questions remain unresolved at the end. But despite the outrageousness of the back story, this is a unique, gripping, and very hard-boiled book that takes a hard if somewhat simplistic look at what drives the people who do dangerous work.


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