Alternative Worlds
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2015
- Messages
- 999
The New Space Opera
Gardner Dozois (editor) and Jonathan Strahan (editor)
Eos, Jun 2007, $15.95
ISBN: 0060846755
In the Introduction to this anthology consisting of eighteen original contributions, the definition of the space opera subplot is discussed with various sources like the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, the New Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (Jack Williamson contribution), and Locus (Paul McAuley article) defining it. Each has similarities yet differences, but this strong anthology summarizes space operas as “romantic adventure set in space and told on a grand scale”. Thus there is plenty of room for a myriad of tales with the vastness of space and the subjective definition of grand. This is exactly what the audience receives in this superb compilation as the authors using their own personal definition of space opera to provide excellent tales differing in locale, scope, and supporting scientific theory. Even the tones are dissimilar as some are life and death struggles to survive a dying system (“Verthandi’s Ring” by Ian McDonald) or a war (Greg Egan’s “Glory”) vs. an amusing Poe play on Mars (“Maelstrom” by Kage Baker). The role of earthlings also varies from the conquered to the conqueror. The bottom line is editors Gardner Dozois and Jonathan Strahan and their eighteen authors provide the grand tour of space with strong characterizations starring in short stories written on a grand scale.
Gardner Dozois (editor) and Jonathan Strahan (editor)
Eos, Jun 2007, $15.95
ISBN: 0060846755
In the Introduction to this anthology consisting of eighteen original contributions, the definition of the space opera subplot is discussed with various sources like the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, the New Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (Jack Williamson contribution), and Locus (Paul McAuley article) defining it. Each has similarities yet differences, but this strong anthology summarizes space operas as “romantic adventure set in space and told on a grand scale”. Thus there is plenty of room for a myriad of tales with the vastness of space and the subjective definition of grand. This is exactly what the audience receives in this superb compilation as the authors using their own personal definition of space opera to provide excellent tales differing in locale, scope, and supporting scientific theory. Even the tones are dissimilar as some are life and death struggles to survive a dying system (“Verthandi’s Ring” by Ian McDonald) or a war (Greg Egan’s “Glory”) vs. an amusing Poe play on Mars (“Maelstrom” by Kage Baker). The role of earthlings also varies from the conquered to the conqueror. The bottom line is editors Gardner Dozois and Jonathan Strahan and their eighteen authors provide the grand tour of space with strong characterizations starring in short stories written on a grand scale.