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Hardcover Alien Crimes Book

ISBN: 1582882231

ISBN13: 9781582882239

Alien Crimes

(Part of the Detective Jake Masters Series)

Alien Crimes brings together six original novellas from six award-winning writers with stories equally diverse in both style and subject matter. This all-new SFBC Creation takes readers through... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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SFBC Collection of SciFi Mysteries

ALIEN CRIMES(2007) is a collection of Novella-length SciFi Mysteries, sponsored by the Science Fiction Book Club, and edited by Mike Resnick. Following are brief reviews of each of the 6 stories: NOTHING PERSONAL ** (52 pages) by Pat Cadigan: A veteran lady cop who is nearing retirement, comes across her strangest case yet. This was my least favorite of the stories in the book, as there were too many loose ends when the story closed. A LOCKED-PLANET MYSTERY *** (60 pages) by Mike Resnick: Semi-interesting story of a human detective paired with and alien detective, and set in the far-future, with mankind spread among the stars, and interspersed with alien cultures. HOXBOMB **** (58 pages) by Harry Turtledove: A more-interesting story, also with a human/alien detective pair, set in the far-future. But, the aliens are more interesting, and the story more intriguing. THE END OF THE WORLD ***** (98 pages) by Kristine Kathryn Rusch: Best of the bunch. Intertwining storylines set in the 100-year-old past and present. A woman detective in a small Western town, has to battle small town politics, in a "situation" involving her ex-husband. DARK HEAVEN (74 pages) by Gregory Benford: TBD WOMB OF THE EVERY WORLD (142 pages) by Walter Jon Williams: TBD The book cover was painted by Donato; and, as usual, is extremely detailed and interesting.

A fine original anthology, with only one weak story. Recommended.

This latest entry in the Science Fiction Book Club's original-anthology series is a followon to Resnick's Down these Dark Spaceways (2005), a volume of hard-boiled SF detective stories. Resnick's mandate this time was similar, but avoid the hard-boiled stuff. Pat Cadigan's "The Dread" opens the book. It's a classic police-procedural that turns into something of a locked-room mystery, with a surprising and effective twist ending. Cadigan draws a convincing portrait of a policewoman on the verge of a breakdown. I liked it, and I bet you will too. The highlight of Alien Crimes is Gregory Benford's "Dark Heaven", an elegant tribute to the Travis McGee mysteries, set in Benford's native Alabama. This atmospheric Gulf Coast pastoral features the obligatory world-weary detective in a near-future police-procedural that takes a very odd turn. Alien amphibians from Centaurus have established a coastal enclave near Mobile. Detective Mckenna is investigating an odd series of drowning homicides.... A strong story, one of Benford's best ever. It may turn out to be part of a novel. I hope so. Walter Jon Williams "Womb of Every World" is a long novella (140+ pages), an extract from his upcoming novel Implied Spaces (to be published in mid-2008). This one starts with sword-play on a desert caravan in a medieval fantasy-world, then veers into Aristoian high-tech wizardry. Some Very Cool stuff happens.... As editor Resnick notes, "whatever you think it is, it's almost certainly not." There's no real resolution here, a hazard of novel-extracts, but the novel looks to be well-worth waiting for. Williams' many fans will appreciate the preview -- and be impatient to read the book. Kristine Kathryn Rusch ventures into (darker than) Zenna Henderson territory in her effective and atmospheric two-track story "The End of the World". In the present, small-town detective Becca Keller is presented with an old mass-grave at her former boyfriend's big resort-restoration project in the Oregon desert. The second, past track relates the unhappy fate of the shipwrecked alien visitors, when the town and resort were new. Rusch is an underrated writer, working at the peak of her powers here. Recommended. Harry Turtledove's "Hoxbomb" is another good police-procedural, this one set on Lacanth, a colony-world shared with the Snarre't, a furry race of biotech geniuses. Humans and Snarre't get along, after a fashion, and trade alien biotech goodies for human computers and vehicles. Lacanth's peace is broken by the birth of a severely-deformed human infant, clearly the victim of a Snarre't hoxbomb, a genetic scrambler-weapon. The case is solved by two detectives, one from each race's police force. The srory is nicely-done, but the ending falls a bit flat, I thought. Mike Resnick's " A Locked Planet Mystery" is the weakest story in the book, and a poster-child for the dangers of an editor buying his own work. Plus it's basically a hardboiled PI tale, contrary to the book's premise. Read
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