Poul Anderson Collectionseeders: 3
leechers: 5
Poul Anderson Collection (Size: 12.29 MB)
DescriptionPoul Anderson Collection Anderson is probably best known for adventure stories in which larger-than-life characters succeed gleefully or fail heroically. His characters were nonetheless thoughtful, often introspective, and well developed. His plot lines frequently involved the application of social and political issues in a speculative manner appropriate to the science fiction genre. He also wrote some quieter works, generally of shorter length, which appeared more often during the latter part of his career. Much of his science fiction is thoroughly grounded in science (with the addition of unscientific but standard speculations such as faster-than-light travel). A specialty was imagining scientifically plausible non-Earthlike planets. Perhaps the best known was the planet of The Man Who Counts; Anderson adjusted its size and composition so that humans could live in the open air but flying intelligent aliens could evolve, and he explored consequences of these adjustments." /> Planet Stories STAR SHIP WITCH OF THE DEMON SEAS TIGER BY THE TAIL THE AMBASSADORS OF FLESH DUEL ON SYRTIS WAR-MAID OF MARS THE VIRGIN OF VALKARION LORD OF A THOUSAND SUNS SWORDSMAN OF LOST TERRA SARGASSO OF LOST STARSHIPS CAPTIVE OF THE CENTAURIANESS THE STAR PLUNDERER OUT OF THE IRON WOMB! Orbit Unlimited The colonist's ships sped toward the far star - they were free at last from the tyrannical government that had oppressed them from birth. Then came the message from Earth - "Return at once-new govrnment-guarantee your freedom-at home!" Was this a reprieve from death - for the perilous ordeal of colonizing an unknown planet would cost many lives - or a trick. The Corridors Of Time The Corridors of Time alternates between the European Stone Age and a repressive future. In this vision of tomorrow, almost everyone is either an agricultural serf or an industrial slave, but the rulers genuinely believe they are creating a better world. Set largely in Denmark, it treats the Neolithic society with knowledge and respect while not hiding its own faults. It is there that the protagonist, having access to literally all periods of the past and future, finally decides to settle down and finds a happy and satisfying life. World Without Stars When the starship Meteor crash-landed on a strange world orbiting a solitary sun in the vast darkness outside the galaxy, her crew of Earthmen had no idea of what to expect. The planet was Earthlike in gravity, air, animal and vegetable life - but what of the native races they glimpsed from a distance? What kind of culture would evolve on a planet whose sky was dominated by the glow of an entire galaxy - and with no other stars save its own dim sun? What kind of gods would they worship? The Earthmen had to find the astounding answers to these questions on a planet split by a world-wide war. Tales Of The Flying Mountains This is a collection of short stories by the great Poul Anderson all set in a common near-future in which mankind is colonizing the Solar System. Anderson's main theme is that, to borrow a phrase from one of his other novels, "...the stars are a newer and more splendid America." For the unifying theme of the stories in this collection is that freedom requires elbow room, and that as Earth (including, alas, the USA) trends more and more towards intrusive government and collectivism, those who leave Earth to colonize the Asteroid Belt and perhaps other planets will still value freedom and individual liberty over government-controlled economic security. Despite the political theme, and in fact because of it, these are good "hard SF" stories and are quite enjoyable. I respectfully disagree with another reviewer who characterizes these stories as being written at a teenage or young-adult level. To the contrary, there is a sophisticated political message contained in these stories, and Anderson's speculations about technology and the future of space travel are informed, intelligent, and quite interesting. These stories are a cut above most science fiction that is out there. A Midsummer Tempest —Nebula and World Fantasy Awards nominee "What if Shakespeare were a historian & his world a mortal one of men & elves? Somewhere, spinning thru another universe is a history almost like ours except for the result of a revolution or two & the earlier incidence of a few inventions. A prince called Hamlet has lived in Denmark. The English woods are full of Pucks, Titanias & Oberons. Cromwell is at the throat of King Charles, but locomotives rage thru the verdant countryside & observation balloons tower over battle lines." The Unicorn Trade Lyrical and beautiful, enchanting and strange, exhilarating and horrific, this extraordinary collaboration between science fiction–fantasy luminary Poul Anderson and his equally creative wife, Karen, almost defies description. Combining their extraordinary talents, the Andersons have produced a sumptuous feast of the written word—stories that delight, move, and disturb, mixed with rich, sumptuous poetry that soars. A truly stunning collection, The Unicorn Trade transports readers to places at once uniquely strange and strangely familiar—magical fairy realms, the far reaches of outer space, and the twisted minds of madmen. Stories of love, loss, and self-discovery are met with soaring verse that celebrates the human spirit and the wonders of the universe. Here are unforgettable bounding leaps of the imagination, where detective noir is ingeniously reimagined, and tales of Edgar Allan Poe–like suspense stand side by side with poignant tributes to the men who led us to the stars. Real treasures are to be found here—a hungry Olympian god’s interactions with a divine computer, a murdered man’s shrewd revenge, an Earthling’s con game on an unsuspecting Martian visitor, and other such flights of inventive fancy—in a sterling compendium of stories, poems, and science fiction haikus (scifaiku) as bright as starshine and more magical and enduring than fairy gold. The Dog And The Wolf Ys has fallen, murdered by her god in an act of senile vengeance. Now Gratillonius, once King of Ys, must strive to save a remnant of his people from utter destruction - then use them to rescue civilisation itself, as the light that once was Rome flickers out and barbarian night descends upon the world. In the process, he will give rise to a legend that will ring down the corridors of time . . . The Dancer From Atlantis An experiment in the future gone awry...and Duncan Reid, American architect of the 20th century, came out of unconciousness to find himself hopelessly marooned in the far distant past. Bound to him were three of the strangest humans he had ever encountered... a medieval Russian, and a fourth-century Hun, and a sacred priestess who worshiped him as a god. And all shared the same fate--pulled through a hole in time to a present which was ancient history. Together the quartet formed a strange alliance which none dared break. For not only were their own futures at stake... but the very future of the world they had found.... Related Torrents
Sharing Widget |