George R. R. Martin; Gardner R. Dozois; Daniel Abraham
Language: English
ISBN mobi-asin
Adventure American Fiction Fugitives General Science Fiction Space Opera Time Travel
Publisher: Eos
Published: Jan 3, 2008
Starred Review. Martin (Song of Ice and Fire series), Dozois (_Strange Days_) and Abraham (_A Shadow in Summer_) revisit classic themes of exploration, exploitation and what it means to be human in this gritty SF adventure. Humanity has finally reached the stars, only to find that all the best spots have been claimed by other races—the Silver Enye, Turu, Cian and others. Human colonists serve as world-building crash-test dummies, dropped onto empty planets deemed too dangerous or inconvenient for other races, to pave over whatever marvels and threats evolution had put there. On the misbegotten colony planet of São Paulo, ore prospector Ramon Espejo has no illusions, especially about how the Enye view humanity. Then Ramon murders the wrong man in a drunken fight and takes off into the wastelands to avoid the Enye authorities. Once in the outback, he discovers he's not the only one trying to hide from the Enye—and that the deadly cat-lizards called chupacabras are far from the worst dangers on São Paulo. This tightly written novel, with its memorable protagonist and intriguing extrapolation, delivers on all levels. (Jan.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
In music, supergroups of established artists are rarely greater than the sum of their parts. The same often goes for science fiction, but critics agreed that these three authors beat the trend by producing a tight, consistent novel. Whether because of Martinâ€TMs decades of collaborative work, Dozoisâ€TMs long career as an editor, or Abrahamâ€TMs fresh prose style, every reviewer said the book seemed as if it were written by one person. The only complaint came from reviewers who had read an earlier, novella-length version of the story; they felt that expanding the story enriched it somewhat, but not by much. While it would be hard to match Hunterâ€TMs Run with any of these authorsâ€TM previous works, it can certainly be called a successful experimentâ€"and a compelling SF novel.Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
Description:
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Martin (Song of Ice and Fire series), Dozois (_Strange Days_) and Abraham (_A Shadow in Summer_) revisit classic themes of exploration, exploitation and what it means to be human in this gritty SF adventure. Humanity has finally reached the stars, only to find that all the best spots have been claimed by other races—the Silver Enye, Turu, Cian and others. Human colonists serve as world-building crash-test dummies, dropped onto empty planets deemed too dangerous or inconvenient for other races, to pave over whatever marvels and threats evolution had put there. On the misbegotten colony planet of São Paulo, ore prospector Ramon Espejo has no illusions, especially about how the Enye view humanity. Then Ramon murders the wrong man in a drunken fight and takes off into the wastelands to avoid the Enye authorities. Once in the outback, he discovers he's not the only one trying to hide from the Enye—and that the deadly cat-lizards called chupacabras are far from the worst dangers on São Paulo. This tightly written novel, with its memorable protagonist and intriguing extrapolation, delivers on all levels. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From
In music, supergroups of established artists are rarely greater than the sum of their parts. The same often goes for science fiction, but critics agreed that these three authors beat the trend by producing a tight, consistent novel. Whether because of Martinâ€TMs decades of collaborative work, Dozoisâ€TMs long career as an editor, or Abrahamâ€TMs fresh prose style, every reviewer said the book seemed as if it were written by one person. The only complaint came from reviewers who had read an earlier, novella-length version of the story; they felt that expanding the story enriched it somewhat, but not by much. While it would be hard to match Hunterâ€TMs Run with any of these authorsâ€TM previous works, it can certainly be called a successful experimentâ€"and a compelling SF novel.
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.