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The New Space Opera 2

All-New Stories of Scientific Adventure

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"Nineteen new stories that show how far space opera has come since its pulp beginnings . . . entertaining and provocative tales of interstellar adventure." —Publishers Weekly
This outstanding collection features all-new stories from some of the most beloved names in science fiction, among them New York Times bestsellers and winners of the Nebula, Hugo, Robert A. Heinlein, Arthur C. Clarke, John W. Campbell, and other prestigious awards. Discover tales of exploration, adventure, and futuristic warfare by:
Neal Asher * John Barnes * Cory Doctorow * John Kessel * Jay Lake * John Meaney * Elizabeth Moon * Garth Nix * Mike Resnick * Justina Robson * Kristine Kathryn Rusch * John Scalzi * Bruce Sterling * Peter Watts * Sean Williams * Tad Williams * Bill Willingham * Robert Charles Wilson * John C. Wright
"An exceedingly fine set of stories written specifically for this collection by some of the best sf authors writing today." —Library Journal (starred review)
Praise for The New Space Opera
"Delivers hours of exhilarating reading." —Booklist
"Dynamic and exciting . . . an essential road map to the cutting edge of SF today." —Charles Stross
"One of the best anthologies ever assembled." —Joe Haldeman
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 25, 2009
      This solid follow-up anthology to 2007's The New Space Opera
      includes 19 new stories that show how far space opera has come since its pulp beginnings in the '30s and '40s. These entertaining and provocative tales of interstellar adventure, written by a laundry list of genre heavyweights, range from Mike Resnick's “Catastrophe Baker and a Canticle for Leibowitz,” a campy misadventure that follows a larger-than-life freelance hero on his quest to regain a musical theater producer's lost song, to John Meaney's “From the Heart,” set in his Nulapeiron universe, which revolves around spy Carl Blackstone and an unlikely—and surprisingly poignant—love story at the galactic core. The impressive diversity of stories reaffirms that soap opera is alive and well, and where some of the genre's most innovative writing is taking place.

    • Library Journal

      July 15, 2009
      From Robert Charles Wilson's evocative tale of a young woman faced with a destiny-changing choice ("Utriusque Cosmi") to John C. Wright's far-future novella, which combines high-tech romance with cosmic drama ("The Far End of History"), the 19 original stories in this collection exemplify the growing sf subgenre of new space opera, featuring galactic themes, dramatic episodes, a social conscience, and literary excellence. The second volume in a continuing series features works by a stellar group of writers that include Mike Resnick (see below), Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Cory Doctorow, Elizabeth Moon, and other genre veterans and more recent writers. VERDICT A solid introduction to the genre.

      Copyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2009
      The term space opera evokes a bygone era in sf, when the likes of Edmond Hamilton and John W. Campbell Jr. spun melodramatic narratives encompassing fathomless vistas of time and space. Yet as editors Dozois and Strahan demonstrated in The New Space Opera (2007), new authors are continually reinventing this sf subgenre. As in its predecessor, a lively bunch of established authors and newcomers is responsible for this volumes 19 exuberantly inventive tales, which offer visions of galactic empires, swashbuckling space piracy, and grimly dystopian far-futures. Robert Charles Wilsons Utriusque Cosmi recounts the fate of an adolescent girl spared from earths destruction and granted virtual immortality by enigmatic aliens. In Elizabeth Moons Chameleons, a bodyguard and his wealthy teenage charges face mortal danger on a deteriorating space station. Cory Doctorows To Go Boldly generously borrows motifs from Star Trek lore and wryly upends them. Speculative-fiction fans looking for consummately crafted fiction that expands the genres creative possibilities to their outer limits will find it here in abundance.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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