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The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction: Volume 3

par George Mann (Directeur de publication)

Autres auteurs: Daniel Abraham (Contributeur), Tim Akers (Contributeur), Stephen Baxter (Contributeur), Paul Cornell (Contributeur), Paul Di Filippo (Contributeur)10 plus, Scott Edelman (Contributeur), Warren Hammond (Contributeur), Ken MacLeod (Contributeur), John Meaney (Contributeur), Jennifer Pelland (Contributeur), Alastair Reynolds (Contributeur), Adam Roberts (Contributeur), Jack Skillingstead (Contributeur), Ian Watson (Contributeur), Ian Whates (Contributeur)

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

Séries: The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction (3)

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Within the framework of Chomskyâe(tm)s Principles and Parameters Theory and the Minimalist Program, this work presents a detailed discussion of the different types of wh-question formation and relativization strategies in Cape Verdean Creole (Santiago variety), especially focusing on wh-movement of PPs. The book explores the Copy Theory of Movement, discussing a defective copy construction involving wh-movement of PPs which poses interesting theoretical questions as to how the defective copy is to be generated and form a chain with the relevant displaced wh-constituent. It is also shown that the defective copy strategy ([wh[PL] âe¦ el[3SG]]) is distinct from resumption ([wh[PL] âe¦ es[3PL]]) due to some properties of PPs in Cape Verdean Creole and to the nature of the pronominal element that occurs at the foot of the wh-chain. This book relates well with those on Cape Verdean Creole and highlights the need to look more closely at deeper syntactic issues in more creole languages, inspiring further comparative work amongst creole linguists.… (plus d'informations)
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I picked up this short story book for Warren Hammond because I love his Kop novels. I wasn't able to finish all the stories in this book before I had to take it back from the library, so here's what I read:
"Rescue Mission" by Jack Skillingstead; "The Fixation", by Alastair Reynolds; "Artifacts", by Stephen Baxter; "Carnival Night" by Warren Hammond; and "The Best Monkey" by Daniel Abraham.

"The Best Monkey" was the one I liked the most, for the amazing world-building (I guess I should say future-building) and character development Abraham managed to do in such a short story, while still managing to make it part mystery story, part love story, and part philosophical treatise on art and sex and consumerism. I haven't read any of his novels yet, but he did write one of my favorite short stories of all time ("An Amicable Divorce" in Datlow's The Dark collection), so I probably should. ( )
  Crowinator | Sep 23, 2013 |
The third and final in this artistically, if perhaps not commerically, successful series doesn't disappoint. There are no truly bad stories, just a few that didn't do much for me. Most I found good and one truly memorable. Mann lives up to his writ of widely varied stories that diverge from near future dystopianism.

Curiously, many of the stories seem twinned, thematically or in images or feel, with other stories. The "gothic suspense" of John Meaney's "Necroflux Day" with its story of family secrets in a world where fuel and information are stored in bones is also conveyed, better, in the gothic "A Soul Stitched in Iron" by Tim Akers. The latter story has an aristocrat, fallen on hard times, tracking down a putative murderer that's upsetting a crime lord's plans. That murderer happens to be an old friend of the protagonist, and the killer's motives involve subterranean secrets that underlie the status of a noveau riche clan. Meaney's story didn't do much for me. Akers interests me enough to that I'm going to seek out his Heart of Veridon set in the same city.

Alastair Reynolds' "The Fixation" and Paul Cornell's "One of Our Bastards Is Missing" are both, loosely defined, alternate history. Reynolds' story has a scientist restoring the Mechanism, very much like our Antikythera Mechanism - an ancient clockwork computer. In her world, while the Romans found no practical use for the Mechanism, the Persians did and founded the predominant power of the world. However, other universes are also interested in their versions of the Mechanism and prepared to vampirically leach its information structure from other universes to facilitate a complete restoration. The central idea is interesting, but the alternate history speculation is at a bare minimum. Not even really alternate history but an annoying, distracting melange of medieval European, Rennaisance, and 19th century politics, Cornell's story features personal teleportation, so called "Impossible Grace", that binds the solar system together and greatly complicates the balance of power in the royal houses of Europe. For me, its plot of political intrigue was ruined by the story's capricious use of history. Stephen Baxter's "Artifacts" is Baxter in his deep cosmological mode. Its scientist hero, provoked by the religious ideas of his father and early death of his wife, ponders why our brane (if I understand the concept correctly, a cluster of universes) has time flowing in one direction and the consequence of death. His discovery oddly echoes the theme of Reynolds' story, but I also liked the story's near future Britain noticeably not affected by any Singularity and poor enough to have to recycle computers for rare metals.

I've always had a soft spot for menacing vegetation in science fiction stories, and two stories supply that need here. Jack Skillingstead's "Rescue Mission" has a planet with a "gynoecious" jungle that has designs on a spaceman who has landed there. Adam Roberts' "Woodpunk" locates the central processing of Gaia's mind in the forests around Chernobyl and reveals the goddess' plans - after she gets a needed upgrade. I liked both stories with the Roberts' one being especially clever.

The world robots make after man has vacated the stage is the setting of two very different stories: Paul Di Filippo's "Providence" and Scott Edelmann's "Glitch". The former story reminded me, in its depiction of odd robot obsessions, here for analog music recordings, of Brian Aldiss' "Who Can Replace a Man?". "Glitch" is something very different, a melange of an authoritarian future albeit in a robot society, a story of a troubled marriage, and a plot rather like those erotic tales of a person initially repulsed - and then embracing - of a lover's sexual kink. And the narration, in a manner somewhat reminiscent of Frederik Pohl's "Day Million", is directed right at us, the protagonist's spiritual ancestors. Both stories are some of the highlights of the book.

Warren Hammond's "Carnival Night" is an effective mystery set on an impoverished colony world that caters to offworld tourists. It shares its setting with Hammond's KOP novels.

Ian Whates' "The Assistant" is part of that long and honorable line of a "day at work" science fiction stories. Here the job is clearing buildings of infestations of nanotechnology and microrobots, most put there as tools of corporate espionage.

Jennifer Pelland's "Minya's Astral Angels", a tale of a corporate heiress defying her mother to free a race of sentient, corporate chattel, was my least favorite story in the book. While the heroine's status was different than that of the usual sort of protagonist in this type of story, it's not a plot I much care for.

Ian Watson's "Long Stay" struck me as a more sociable version of J. G. Ballard's Concrete Island: A Novel. Here, though, the Robinson Crusoe-like retreat from urban life - while still in the midst of the city - may serve an actual agenda. Its protagonist gets stranded in a giant offsite airport parking facility.

"iThink, Therefore I Am", a short short story by Ken MacLeod, tells of a future Apple product that will record your thoughts - and that also comes with a rather disturbing applet that illustrates the possible fiction of free will (based on the very real Libet experiment).

The gem of the book is Daniel Abraham's "The Best Monkey". Its narrator encounters an old lover who heads the wildy successful Fifth Layer. But, as he investigates the company and remembers his conversations with her, he wonders what mutilations of human nature lie behind her efforts. A memorable extrapolation on neuroscience and evolutionary psychology.

Fifteen stories with only Cornell's, Pelland's, and Meaney's not appealing to me. Definitely worth reading. ( )
  RandyStafford | Mar 6, 2012 |
Like Fast Forward 2, I picked this up for the Paul Cornell short story primarily. But I'm still not sure what to make of his Major Hamilton stories; I liked "One of Our Bastards is Missing" better than the first one, but this lacked that Cornell spark that I'm so used to. Highlights of the book included Warren Hammond's "Carnival Night" (a hard-boiled space cop story apparently set in the same universe as his KOP novels; I'll have to seek them out), Paul Di Fillipo's "Providence" (a marvelously inventive tale of robots in a post-human society looking for their equivalent to drugs), "The Assistant" by Ian Whates (the story of a cleaning crew in a dangerous corporate world; these are the sorts of people I wish I was), and "Long Stay" by Ian Watson (a strangely surreal narrative about a man trapped in an airport parking lot... forever). Less successful stories for me included "Rescue Mission" by Jack Skillingstead (aliens wanting a man for his mating energy or something is just one of many cliches on display) and "Woodpunk" by Adam Roberts (the best part is the title, and it's not even that clever). I was disappointed by "The Fixation" by Alastair Reynolds and "Artifacts" by Stephen Baxter, as both of them had fabulous ideas but no story to match. And I'm not quite sure what to think of John Meaney's "Necroflux Day", which I enjoyed in spite of not understanding some key parts of it. (Meaney has some novels in the same universe; I'll have to seek those out too.) As you can tell, the types of stories on display here run the gamut that the genre has to offer, and the talent is on the whole rather strong. A strong, enjoyable collection of current sf; I really like these unthemed anthologies.
  Stevil2001 | Aug 18, 2009 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Mann, GeorgeDirecteur de publicationauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Abraham, DanielContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Akers, TimContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Baxter, StephenContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Cornell, PaulContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Di Filippo, PaulContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Edelman, ScottContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Hammond, WarrenContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
MacLeod, KenContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Meaney, JohnContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Pelland, JenniferContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Reynolds, AlastairContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Roberts, AdamContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Skillingstead, JackContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Watson, IanContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Whates, IanContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Fowler, HardyArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
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Within the framework of Chomskyâe(tm)s Principles and Parameters Theory and the Minimalist Program, this work presents a detailed discussion of the different types of wh-question formation and relativization strategies in Cape Verdean Creole (Santiago variety), especially focusing on wh-movement of PPs. The book explores the Copy Theory of Movement, discussing a defective copy construction involving wh-movement of PPs which poses interesting theoretical questions as to how the defective copy is to be generated and form a chain with the relevant displaced wh-constituent. It is also shown that the defective copy strategy ([wh[PL] âe¦ el[3SG]]) is distinct from resumption ([wh[PL] âe¦ es[3PL]]) due to some properties of PPs in Cape Verdean Creole and to the nature of the pronominal element that occurs at the foot of the wh-chain. This book relates well with those on Cape Verdean Creole and highlights the need to look more closely at deeper syntactic issues in more creole languages, inspiring further comparative work amongst creole linguists.

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