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33 oeuvres 192 utilisateurs 25 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Stan C. Smith

Diffusion (2015) 30 exemplaires
Genesis Sequence (2021) 13 exemplaires
Primal Eclipse 5 exemplaires
Bridgers 3: The Voice of Reason (2018) 5 exemplaires
Savage (2016) 4 exemplaires
Fused: Training Day (2020) 3 exemplaires

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These short stories are perfectly written. They sucked me into their world immediately, intrigued me as I read, and resolved themselves with satisfying and imaginative endings. At times the author offers points one can think about and relate to one's own life.
 
Signalé
BridgitDavis | Jul 9, 2023 |
I got over halfway through, but I'm dropping this now because while the protagonist is usually smart enough, she is being dangerously obtuse, more than once, and I'm done. This is a kind of stress I can take action against, after all.
 
Signalé
terriaminute | 1 autre critique | Dec 4, 2022 |
Each story is a delight
This book of science fiction short stories delighted me with the characters, the details, the interesting and varied plots, and the endings. I liked the endings because they stopped short of telling me everything that happened, so I was left with my mind filling in possibilities but not feeling frustrated by the lack of resolution.
 
Signalé
BridgitDavis | Oct 18, 2022 |
I start and stop reading more books than I finish. There are enough great books out there to last beyond my years on this earth, so that, combined with my sense of how precious time is as I get older, means I cannot justify the time spent on a book that doesn’t measure up. This demeanor also stems from my 30 years as an Indie author who is constantly polishing her craft. The work never ends, and there is no such thing as perfect, but I appreciate authors who excel at the craft. Stan C. Smith is one of those authors.

As an adolescent, teen, and young adult, I read lots of Robert A. Heinlein. Recently, I went back to read some of those beloved works, and realized I wasn’t quite as impressed with some of them. (Bear with me, here, I’ll circle back to the book review). I started re-reading Stranger in a Strange Land. An award-winning, and some think, quintessential work by a science fiction master. Honestly, I stopped reading it this time halfway through, because it seemed artificially padded and verbose, and ultimately, I couldn’t stand the bombastic tone that pretended to be one of the characters, but was really the narrator—which was Heinlein himself. He didn’t do that with many of his other works, especially the ones they categorize as the Juveniles. So here’s the point: if I can stop reading and put away the work of a master, whom I have admired my entire life, I can put away anyone else’s book. And when I don’t do that, it’s a significant action.

I read Obsolete Theorem in one sitting. One day. And I often read more slowly than I should because I am too busy studying the books I read. It’s hard for me to take off that editor/critic hat. But I sailed through this book, fingers full of virtual paper cuts. This book was like The Best of Heinlein meets Clan of the Cave Bear. Everything was handled with expert finesse: The grammar and mechanics and spelling (don’t recall any issues at all, but maybe that was because I was carried so quickly through the story), the plot (intriguing enough to make me download the book), the characters (authentic, quirky, relatable), the concept (adventurous, thought-provoking and exciting), the setting (unusual, vivid, visual), the descriptions (clean, succinct, and effective). Even the ending tied up the storyline neatly, while still leaving just enough intrigue to make me immediately download the next in the series, and mentally make a stack on my reading table with this author’s other work.

Notably, I am not a physicist, and I can’t say for sure how sound that science is in this book, but I’ve written some similar books, and done the research, and I’m educated enough to know that it all seems perfectly plausible, and it’s obvious the author took great pains to understand the material. I also enjoyed and appreciated that he managed to fold that complex material into the book in an easily understood way, without talking down to the reader. So often, in these theoretical and speculative fiction books, the author is found standing on a lectern, bloviating about brainy subjects, as if to say, “Look how smart I am, and how dumb you are.” There’s nothing worse that a haughty, stuffed-shirt author, but you will find none of that here.

I’m excited to be excited about a book and its author. I’ve already begun the second one, and will be reading the author’s entire catalog, whatever that may be, because he's hooked me. I can taste the metal in my mouth. If you care about intelligent, entertaining, intriguing, and well-rendered novels, this one cannot be missed.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
KelliJaeBaeli | 4 autres critiques | May 30, 2022 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
33
Membres
192
Popularité
#113,797
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
25
ISBN
10

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