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Georgia On My Mind & Other Places [Hardcover]

Tor Books
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

Feb 23 1995
A collection of fifteen of the author's most successful short works includes the Nebula Award-winning title story, ""The Feynman Solution,"" and ""Destroyer of Worlds."" By the author of Godspeed.

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The title story of this collection won the Nebula Award. From the Arabian Nights to tennis on the moon, from Babbage's Difference Machine to the "lost" years of Jesus of Nazareth, Sheffield creates science fiction spanning a huge variety of subjects and settings.

"...Sheffield's sixth collection of short stories...affirms his place as a central exponent of hard SF.... valuable ideas from a master craftsman." --Publisher's Weekly

From Publishers Weekly

Physicist Sheffield's (Godspeed) sixth collection of short stories, written in the late 1980s and early '90s, affirms his place as a central exponent of hard SF. "Georgia on My Mind," which won a Nebula Award, features a narrator who displays less personality than the letters and diaries of the mysterious "L.D.," the putative author of a 150-year-old manual for a mechanical computer. Sheffield proceeds on the understanding that hard SF is well suited to the form of the mystery, in which a narrator takes second seat behind the plot and its specific expression (as, for example, Doyle's Dr. Watson in the Sherlock Holmes mysteries). His spare prose serves as background lighting, revealing no more than needs to be shown. Tales such as "The Feynman Saltation" and the exemplary "Humanity Test" are effective for discoveries that do not depend on their main characters' intuition. Occasionally, as in "Trapalanda," the payoff is inadequate, but generally these 15 stories satisfy, presenting the readers with valuable ideas from a master craftsman.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Coping with High Tech May 31 2004
Format:Hardcover
Georgia On My Mind is a collection of fourteen SF stories published between 1987 and 1994. It also contains an introduction by the author and afterwords for most of the stories.

In The Feynman Saltation, an artist with a brain tumor starts having visions of the past. In the Bee's Kiss, a convicted voyeur uses his skills to spy on a pair of aliens. In Millennium, a Christian tries to postpone judgment day. In Fifteen-Love On the Dead Man's Chest, a tennis game and a funeral lead to confusion and distress. In Deep Safari, a spurned lover rushes to the rescue in a small way.

In Beyond the Golden Road, a Christian monk finds a soulmate in the Great Khan's court. In Health Care System, a medical researcher creates a bleeding edge support system. In Humanity Test, Godwin's The Cold Equations meet Heinlein's Jerry Was a Man, with a new twist. In That Strain Again, falling leaves repel aliens from Vegas IV. In Destroyer of Worlds, space fanatics attempt ecological engineering.

In the Fifteenth Station of the Cross, the dying ruler of the world decides to bring a miracle healer from the past. In Trapalanda, a Andean explorer guides a blind man to an extraordinary discovery. In Obsolete Skill, a science fiction writer waking in the future finds that old methods work better for him. In Georgia On My Mind, a pair of computer geeks discover evidence of a working analytical engine in New Zealand.

The author is better known for his high tech, world spanning novels, but these stories show that he can produce small gems of science fiction as well. Of course, these stories are mostly about people who use or encounter some facet of human technology or alien supertech. Some of these characters are unforgettable, especially the couple in Georgia On My Mind, even though they are known only through letters and journal entries.

Highly recommended for Sheffield fans and for anyone who enjoys short tales about humans struggling to live in a technological environment.

-Arthur W. Jordin

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 3.8 out of 5 stars  4 reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Coping with High Tech May 30 2004
By Arthur W. Jordin - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Georgia On My Mind is a collection of fourteen SF stories published between 1987 and 1994. It also contains an introduction by the author and afterwords for most of the stories.

In The Feynman Saltation, an artist with a brain tumor starts having visions of the past. In the Bee's Kiss, a convicted voyeur uses his skills to spy on a pair of aliens. In Millennium, a Christian tries to postpone judgment day. In Fifteen-Love On the Dead Man's Chest, a tennis game and a funeral lead to confusion and distress. In Deep Safari, a spurned lover rushes to the rescue in a small way.

In Beyond the Golden Road, a Christian monk finds a soulmate in the Great Khan's court. In Health Care System, a medical researcher creates a bleeding edge support system. In Humanity Test, Godwin's The Cold Equations meet Heinlein's Jerry Was a Man, with a new twist. In That Strain Again, falling leaves repel aliens from Vegas IV. In Destroyer of Worlds, space fanatics attempt ecological engineering.

In the Fifteenth Station of the Cross, the dying ruler of the world decides to bring a miracle healer from the past. In Trapalanda, a Andean explorer guides a blind man to an extraordinary discovery. In Obsolete Skill, a science fiction writer waking in the future finds that old methods work better for him. In Georgia On My Mind, a pair of computer geeks discover evidence of a working analytical engine in New Zealand.

The author is better known for his high tech, world spanning novels, but these stories show that he can produce small gems of science fiction as well. Of course, these stories are mostly about people who use or encounter some facet of human technology or alien supertech. Some of these characters are unforgettable, especially the couple in Georgia On My Mind, even though they are known only through letters and journal entries.

Highly recommended for Sheffield fans and for anyone who enjoys short tales about humans struggling to live in a technological environment.

-Arthur W. Jordin

1 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars A mixed bag May 1 2003
By J. Philip Magnier - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Sheffield has probably gotten more acclaim than he deserves because he is a "real" scientist, I admit it influenced me. His dialog and characterisations are often poor and laboured. He has the ideas okay, but Georgia on my Mind is the only story that makes it as a piece of fiction.
2 of 5 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Mixed bag. Sep 15 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I don't think Sheffield is as well known as other hard sf authors like Baxter, Bear, Egan, Niven, etc. After reading some of his stuff I think that's justified. Although more human then Egan's work (but then again a dead mackerel is more human then Egan's average fair) & fairly eloquent there's nothing I couldn't get out of Clarke, Asimov, etc. (I mentioned them because he's sort of old school, but I'd like to add that I like the old school which is perhaps why I hate saying the things I'm saying.) The fact that I haven't mentioned any of the stories is kind of because they didn't strike me as that memorable. Science fiction authors (all authors really) tend to have bad marriages so it is nice to read stories about an apparently good marriage since the lost wife imagery is strong in some of his stories. (He recently remarried so it's pleasing to know he's moved on.)I've read too much hard sf I guess because if I'd started with Sheffield I'm sure I'd have a higher opinion of his stories. I'm being too harsh these are good stories there's just too much great science fiction being produced these days to make them stand out. Don't let my mood bias you & I am glad I bought it. To further defend him Asimov's my favorite author, but I've read better written stories then Asimov's. I'm sure some will have the same view of Sheffield. A good hard sf author worth reading, but his overshadowed status is understandable since hard sf is such a big field.
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