Showing posts with label Michael Moorcock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Moorcock. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Recent book arrivals


Here are some book arrivals from June and July 2012.



This is a new translation of the seminal Soviet-era novel Roadside Picnic by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky. The translation is by Olena Bormashenko and it restores a fair amount of text that was excised from earlier editions. James Morrow does a side-by-side comparison of translations at the Locus Roundtable. The story was made into one of the greatest of all science fiction films, Stalker, directed by Andrei Tarkovsky (follow here for a short review). The film itself is the subject of a book-length analysis, Zona by Geoff Dyer (LA Times review of Zona). The new edition of Roadside Picnic includes a brief introduction by Ursula K. LeGuin and a fascinating afterward by Boris Strugatsky on the conception of the novel and the difficulties he and his brother had in getting it published in the Soviet Union, including specific passages that the censors objected to. I've included the brilliant Robert Penn Warren epigraph above.


Caliban's War by James S. A. Corey (actually the pen name of authors Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck) is the second book in their "Expanse" series, following Leviathan Wakes, which is currently nominated for the best novel Hugo Award. (Hugo voting closes at the end of this month.)


Unlike the first two books, which are new, Stone Spring by Stephen Baxter came out in 2011. This is the U.S. hardback edition. First in a trilogy.



The new book Science Fiction: The 101 Best Novels 1985-2010 by Damien Broderick and Paul Di Filippo is a sort of sequel to the earlier Science Fiction: The 100 Best Novels 1949-1984 by David Pringle, published in 1985. Pringle contributes a forward to the new book. As with the earlier book, there is plenty here to argue with and discuss. I'm pleased to see consideration given here to books by Gene Wolfe, Paul Park, Karen Joy Fowler, Maureen McHugh, Kim Stanley Robinson, Justina Robson, M. John Harrison, Kathleen Ann Goonan, Ian R. MacLeod, to name a few favorites, although I sometimes disagree with which title is chosen for a given author. There are a few authors I was disappointed to see included here: Orson Scott Card and Audrey Niffenegger for instance. Series fiction is treated in a confusing manner, sometimes listing groups of books, such as The Hunger Games trilogy, and at other times a single title of a book that does not stand alone and should be read as part of larger narrative. There are several I haven't read and hope to get around to reading, even some I had never heard of before, which is fun. Since the contents pages, above, only list the titles of the books being discussed, you can play along with the game of how many of the books can you name the author.



The Year's Best Science Fiction and Fantasy: 2012 edited by Rich Horton is the latest in a series of year's best anthologies. The stories are actually all from 2011, of course, from diverse sources and are reprinted here in 2012. Judging from the stories I've read so far, it's a pretty good year.



In an unprecedented move, The New Yorker dedicated a June double-issue to the science fiction genre, both fiction and non-fiction. The Daniel Clowes cover has the science fiction genre crashing the party. A couple interior illustrations give a sense of the look of the issue.


The Laughter of Carthage by Michael Moorcock is the second in his Colonel Pyat Quartet. This is the 1984 first U.S. hardback edition. The first volume in the series was Byzantium Endures. PM Press is reissuing the series in trade paperback this year.


Some Kind of Fairy Tale by Graham Joyce is the latest novel from the acclaimed British author, unjustly not well known in the U.S.


My Dirty Little Book of Stolen Time by Liz Jensen, published in 2006, was discussed in the book Science Fiction: The 101 Best Novels 1985-2010, above. I'd never heard of it. It looks quite fun.



The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-Ninth Annual Collection, edited by Gardner Dozois, is the biggest, in terms of word-count, of the best of the year science fiction anthologies, and the longest running. Each year it keeps readers abreast of the best short fiction in the genre, and highlights new authors whose work readers should seek out. It's fascinating to compare the contents of this anthology with those of the Horton, above, and the year's best anthologies by Strahan and Hartwell & Cramer mentioned in earlier posts.



The Apocalypse Codex by Charles Stross, is the fourth book in the author's Laundry Files series, a Lovecraft-flavored espionage thriller series. The epigraph is the timeless Peter Principle.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Even more May book arrivals


More books arrived in the mail, including some that I am particularly excited about.


If you've read this blog for a while you'll know that I think Kim Stanley Robinson is a first rate writer. I've been looking forward to the arrival of his new novel, 2312. In a previous post I excerpted the Gary K. Wolfe review of the book that appeared in the May 2012 issue of Locus Magazine. Locus Online has now made the entire review available (follow here).


Ad Eternum by Elizabeth Bear is a novella in her New Amsterdam series from Subterranean Press.


Byzantium Endures by Michael Moorcock is the first in his Colonel Pyat Quartet. This is the first American edition from 1981.


Part of his Deepgate Codex series, Damnation for Beginners by Alan Campbell has a lovely cover illustration by Ian McQue and interior illustrations by Bob Eggleton. (Click to enlarge images.)




Tales from Gavagan's Bar (expanded edition) by L. Sprague de Camp and Fletcher Pratt, illustrated by Inga Pratt and Tim Kirk, published by Owlswick Press in 1978. This is a collection of stories in the "club story" tradition of Lord Dunsany's Jorkins stories, Arthur C. Clarke's Tales from the White Hart, Larry Niven's The Draco Tavern, and many others.


The Testament of Jessie Lamb by Jane Rogers recently won the 2012 Arthur C. Clarke award for the best science fiction novel published in Britain in 2011. It's now available in a United States edition. I like the epigraph from Euripides and couldn't resist including it here.




The Moon Moth is one of Jack Vance's best known stories, a classic of science fiction that has been anthologized many times, including The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume Two B. Here is a new adaptation as a graphic novel by Humayoun Ibrahim. The story is stripped of most of Vance's distinctive prose, still the artist has done a wonderful job telling the story with a visual style that matches Vance in surprising ways.



Railsea, the latest from China Mieville, is marketed as a young adult novel. Interior illustrations by the author.