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Adventure
 
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Adventure [Paperback]

Chris Roberson

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Monkeybrain (Oct 11 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1932265139
  • ISBN-13: 978-1932265132
  • Product Dimensions: 22.9 x 15.3 x 2.6 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 522 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #793,105 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

ADVENTURE, the first volume of an annual anthology of original fiction in the spirit of early twentieth-century pulp fiction magazines, features stories from all genres, promising both literary sophistication and pulse-pounding action. Contributors to the first volume, among them leading lights and award-winners in the fields of science fiction, fantasy, horror, mystery, and western, include John Edward Ames, Lou Anders, Neal Asher, Kage Baker, Barry Baldwin, O'Neil De Noux, Paul Di Filippo, Mark Finn, Michael Kurland, John Meaney, Michael Moorcock, Chris Nakashima-Brown, Kim Newman, Mike Resnick, Chris Roberson, Matthew Rossi, and Marc Singer.

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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Moderately Diverting, Jan 18 2007
By Rodney Meek - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Adventure (Paperback)
This handsomely produced volume (with excellent cover art) from MonkeyBrain Books purports to be the first in a series of annual anthologies. However, I would guess that the sales figures didn't merit a follow-up, or the publisher has since had better things to do.

It's supposed to be packed full of pulpy goodness, featuring heroes and insidious villains and plots from those low-grade magazines of yore with their two-fisted tough guys and the dangerous dames that loved them, but only a few of the stories seem to really belong in the pulp genre. (There's a bit of a feel here that the selections were based on which of the editor's friends, or friends of friends, had something to hand at the time.) Paul Di Filippo's "Eel Pie Stall" is a complete mismatch, since it's an epic tale of...a soul's karmic progress through Tibetan-style reincarnation. So, very little in the way of gunplay, fisticuffs, or scantily-clad women in need of rescue. Meanwhile, Michael Kurland's "Four Hundred Slaves" isn't really that bad, but it feels like it would've been better placed in a collection of detective fiction set in ancient Rome (a suprisingly crowded field these days). And "Paris Is Burning", by Barry Baldwin, while exceptionally well-told, just doesn't seem to belong, since it is a pretty straightforward summary (albeit in vigorous contemporary language) of the life of the famous Paris from the Trojan War.

Of those that better succeed in capturing the genre, Kim Newman's Victorian-era "Richard Riddle, Boy Detective" is an affectionate homage to the Boy's Own-style of thrilling yarns, and Michael Moorcock's "Dogfight Donovan" has quite the same feel but a WWI setting in which the good guys are much given to saying "Gosh" and "Gee" and are keen to give the Boche a sound wallop to the jaw. Mike Resnick, a past master at exactly this sort of thing, contributes "Island Of Annoyed Souls", his take on Doctor Moreau, and Mark Finn offers "Bridge Of Teeth", in which boxing meets Mexican sorcery.

Chris Roberson, the editor, includes his own story "Prowl Unceasing", in which his recurring protagonist, Abraham Van Helsing, teams up with a mysterious fugitive from India (who should be well-known to Verne fans) to fight jungle monsters in the historical kingdom of the White Rajah on Borneo. In a much more bizarre mode, Lou Anders proffers his "Death Wish", which was to have been the first installment in a serial novel set in some kind of post-Apocalypse Old West. I would've liked to have seen this play out further, but there's no indication that Part 2 of his story has been released anywhere.

I found Marc "Not the Beastmaster" Singer's "Johnny Come Lately" to be the best of the lot, although it is much enhanced if the reader has a pretty good knowledge of the lore of the Green Lantern from DC Comics. Dealing with the adventures of a superhero called the Silverglass, it's essentially his take on the much-maligned GL Kyle Rayner, the successor to the best-known GL, Hal Jordan. Very well-done and highly rewarding to the comic book fan.

Not the greatest collection ever, but there are certainly some worthy selections here.

6 of 8 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A "Can't Miss Pulp Fiction Lovers Anthology", Mar 13 2006
By Christopher R. Yates "Chris" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Adventure (Paperback)
I read Adventure, Vol. 1 about two months ago...and enjoyed it. It's hard to give a sweeping review of an anthology; particularly in this book where the stories cover just about every subject found in pulp fiction: sci-fi, horror, war, hero/adventure, even a superhero story. With that said, it is fair to say that there is something for every pulp fan in Adventure, Vol. 1. There is an odd tale or two that I just couldn't fathom, but that may be a product of my impatient/fast reading style and nothing to do with the quality of the story. All of the stories are written well by many authors whose names are very familiar to me as a fan of sci-fi, fantasy, and superhero fiction.

My favorites, in no particular order are: "Richard Riddle: Boy Detective in The Case of the French Spy" by Kim Newman; "Silence of the Sea," by O'Neil De Noux; "Dogfight Donovan's Day Off," by Michael Moorcock; and, "Johnny Come Lately," by Marc Singer. "Richard Riddle..." is an excellent adventure/horror tale starring a trio of kids, told from their point of view, but nonetheless a gripping adult "nail-biter." "Silence of the Sea" brings to mind the writing style of Jack London...if he had written sci-fi. "Dogfight Donovan's Day Off" is quite similar to a G-8 or Dusty Ayres yarn, except that the degree of action experienced by the protagonist here makes both those pulp characters look like girl scouts pressing flowers. I would very much love to see "Johnny Come Lately" expanded in to a full length novel. In one, too-short story the author recites a very detailed mythos/back story and present plight for a superhero who far exceeds his four-color peers in dimension/depth.

Titling a book "Vol. 1" would suggest, to me anyway, that a "Vol. 2" was in the offing. However, looking at Monkey Brain Book's (the publisher's) anticipated 2006 releases on their website, I don't see an entry for "Vol. 2." That's too bad. I think Adventure, Vol. 1 is definitely worth a follow-up volume.

Respectfully,

Chris Yates

3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Shame on me for not reviewing this sooner!, Jan 20 2008
By Cloud-spear "cloudheart52" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Adventure (Paperback)
First of all, I am a voracious reader of pulp and adventure. When the two are combined, magic happens! Chris Roberson, thank you! I really enjoyed your Van Helsing story. Beware, there be tygers has never been truer...but then I love anything to do with mysterious jungles.

Going down the rest of the list:

Island of Annoyed Souls - Funny little piece that pokes fun at Wells' Island of Dr. Moreau. I enjoyed most the carefree adventurer-narrator and would look forward to reading his exploits in the future. The story didn't grab me so much as that.

Ghulistan Bust Out - One of the only stories I felt here that was really lacking. No real oomph

Lost Time - Science fiction entry I found had more interesting details than characters

The Mad Lands - Surreal and bizarre alternate-ish world storytelling. I liked the foreshadowing and although it's merely part 1, I like the direction of the anthology which provides snippets of stories much like old pulp mags would.

The Unfortunate Gytt - Wonderful time travel story! Kage Baker always pulls through. Rock em sock em mystery meets "oh by the way we're with a time traveller, old chap" story. Anyway, it involves ruins and a dash of steampunk.

Pacing White Stallion - Needed some oomph, too. Your in the desert and coming of age...yeah we get it.

Eel Pie Stall - Completely surreal and rather disturbing entry revolving around Buddhist concepts of soul journey, fate, and time.

The Bridge of Teeth - All right! Now this is what I came here for! Fights and jungles! That's right, it doesn't get better than this. Oh wait, Aztec gods you say? Well sign me right up, then!

Richard Riddle: Boy Detective - My favorite of all the stories. Wonderful children's book mystery meets historical fiction meets fantasy but with charming British wit/aplomb! Go go, kid evolutionist detectives go!

Silence of the Sea - Meh. Not bad.

Four Hundred Slaves - If Perry Mason lived in third century Roman empire and was surrounded by political intrigue. Marvelous.

Acephelous Dreams - I'm sort of up in the air about Neal Asher's work in general. On the one hand, neat ideas. On the other...I get the feeling of disconnection from all emotions in all of his work that I've read. It's disconcerting.

Ghosts of Christmas - Why yes, I would like some angsty horror, noirish, spooky house and poltergeist filled, knuckle dragging fight scenes. More please!

Dogfight Donovan's Day Off - Dang it, Michael Moorcock, since when did you write something I actually cared for? Okay okay, the Queen book you wrote was awesome. This rules.

Johnny Come Lately - Delightfully smarmy

Paris is Burning - The only reason I didn't read this was because of burnout on all the Troy stuff. It feels like everyone's doing it, Dan Simmons, Brad Pitt, Tad Williams. I'm spent, baby.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 6 reviews  4.0 out of 5 stars 

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