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%T Metrognome
%A Alan Dean Foster
%I Ballantine/DelRey
%D August 1990
%O paperback, US$4.95
%P 243
%G 0-345-36356-6
A mixed bag of SF, horror and fantasy reprints by Alan Dean Foster from the
magazines and various previous anthologies. I didn't find it as good as his
earlier With Friends Like These and Who Needs
Enemies. Too much horror, for one thing (but that could be just me) and
too many slight pieces that read like finger exercises on fairly obvious
gimmicks. For Foster completists only.
%T The Man-Kzin Wars III
%A Niven/Pournelle/Stirling/Anderson
%I Baen
%D August 1990
%O paperback, US$4.50
%P 310
%G 0-671-72008-2
More hard-SF writers romping in Niven's `Known Space' -- with (mirabile
dictu) a new Known-Space lead story from Niven himself! The second story is
a collaboration between Jerry Pournelle and rising star S. M. Stirling. It
gives us our best look yet at Slaver psychology, presenting them as
sinister clowns so specialized on their mental coercive powers that they're
not even very bright. Anderson provides a satisfying finish with the further
adventures of Hans Saxtorph against the Kzin. Fun stuff for Known-Space fans
and anybody who likes traditional adventure & military hard SF. Recommended.
%T The Warlock Rock
%A Christopher Stasheff
%I Ace
%D August 1990
%O paperback, US$3.95
%P 275
%G 0-441-87313-8
There are few ordeals more teeth-gritting for a reviewer than reading
the nth volume of a series that has clearly outlasted its original magic
and is transparently being milked for bucks by an author writing
successively tireder self-parodies. Stasheff reached that point with the
Warlock books some time back. The most this one has going for it is a raft
of groaner puns about rock music, and even those are smothered under
several tons of gooey cutesiness. If you liked the first couple Warlock
books as much as I did, do yourself a favor and don't read this one.
%T The Stone Dogs
%A S. M. Stirling
%I Baen
%D August 1990
%O paperback, US$4.50
%P 522
%G 0-671-72009-0
As good and gripping as S. M. Stirling has been in the first two Draka
novels (Marching Through Georgia and Under The Yoke)
this one comes as a bit of a disappointment. The final confrontation between
the slaveholding Draka and the Alliance for Democracy is weakly plotted and
the ending is disappointing -- that is, we don't get to see the Draka
nuked into a thin glaze as they so richly deserve. One gets the uncomfortable
feeling Stirling is setting up for another sequel. Oh, well. The
world-building is still top-notch and the book worth a read to find out how it
all came out.
RECEIVED BUT NOT REVIEWED:
The Folk Of The Fringe (Orson Scott Card) Sorry, I couldn't face another dose of Card's confused religiosity and obsession with his Mormon origins.
Up to Eric's Home Page | To Index | Thu Sep 06 10:41:30 EDT 1990 |
Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com>