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Remaking History & Other Stories
 
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Remaking History & Other Stories (Paperback)

by Kim Stanley Robinson (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Review

"Like the best SF, going back to Wells, Robinson puts the present in context of the large sweep of history, integrating the personal with the political, the cultural and the evolutionary." -"The Los Angeles Times"
"Robinson's prose is so consistently superior that anything he depicts comes vividly to life." -"The Chicago Sun-Times"
"[The stories] demonstrate Robinson's keen sophistication and acute sensitivity to detail. Reminiscent of both Philip K. Dick and Brian Aldiss in his daring approach to speculative fiction....[Robinson's] talent is unmistakable." -"Library Journal"
"Taking large, world-changing events and using very small, personal reactions to them is what gives his fiction the power and intensity that makes it so successful. Robinson is a major voice in the field and this collection is another example of why. Highly recommended." -"Amazing"
"Encountering [these stories] again en masse reinforces your appreciation of the scope of his talent, from traditional (and very fine) science fiction to stories that couldn't be less like science fiction, from suspense to comedy, from the simple to the complex." -"St. Louis Post-Dispatch"
"If a better single-author short story collection comes out this year, it's going to be one hell of a year." -"Locus"


Review

"Like the best SF, going back to Wells, Robinson puts the present in context of the large sweep of history, integrating the personal with the political, the cultural and the evolutionary." -The Los Angeles Times

"Robinson's prose is so consistently superior that anything he depicts comes vividly to life." -The Chicago Sun-Times

"[The stories] demonstrate Robinson's keen sophistication and acute sensitivity to detail. Reminiscent of both Philip K. Dick and Brian Aldiss in his daring approach to speculative fiction....[Robinson's] talent is unmistakable." -Library Journal

"Taking large, world-changing events and using very small, personal reactions to them is what gives his fiction the power and intensity that makes it so successful. Robinson is a major voice in the field and this collection is another example of why. Highly recommended." -Amazing

"Encountering [these stories] again en masse reinforces your appreciation of the scope of his talent, from traditional (and very fine) science fiction to stories that couldn't be less like science fiction, from suspense to comedy, from the simple to the complex." -St. Louis Post-Dispatch

"If a better single-author short story collection comes out this year, it's going to be one hell of a year." -Locus

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4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Some real gems here, Sep 11 2002
By Glen Engel Cox "www.engel-cox.org" (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I like Stan's writing, even when I'm totally unsure of what it is I'm reading. He's one of the few writers I don't mind re-reading; if anything, I get more of what I like in his writing during a re-reading, since I then tend to forget about trying to follow the "plot" or "meaning" of the story, and instead just watch the way the words flow. However, even given the above, I tend to like Stan best when I can enjoy the prose and the story.

In this collection, the stories I thought fulfilled both promises were:

* "The Translator"--A perfect bit about being caught in the middle of a culture clash, with only your wits to fall onto. Reminiscent of Stanley Weinbaum (in a good way).
* "Before I Wake"--A truly Dickian story about consciousness and unconsciousness, in that classic "am I or am I not," except to show that it's both.
* "Remaking History"--Actually metafiction, as it is a story about alternate histories, while being an alternate history itself. Simplistic, yet clever.
* "A Sensitive Dependence on Initial Conditions"--Not really a story, but a philosophical essay about choices as view through scientific ideas. Stan is reviewing the theme of his earlier story "Lucky Strike," with a more mature outlook on the problem. The last line, repeated through the story like a chorus, sends a chill down your spine (in a good way).

The following I enjoyed to a lesser extent:

* "The Part of Us That Loves"--Liked the modernization of the Bible, but didn't follow the overall story (or, on the other hand, didn't see that it came to a conclusion).
* "A History of the Twentieth Century, with Illustrations"--Liked the condensation of the history, but wasn't affected personally by the character change.
* "Vinland the Dream"--Loved the construction of the story (as if it were a scientific journal article), but the story itself didn't move me.
* "Rainbow Bridge"--Or "Stan Robinson Tries His Hand at Native American Magical Realism." Some wonderful bits, but the overall story failed to reach me.
* "Muir on Shasta"--Nice description, but too short (length and plot) for a complete story.
* "Glacier"--A textbook example of Kessel's Humanist theory of SF. The character reacts to the SF concept, and "changes," yet affects the concept in no way. The old school hates this sort of stuff. I don't mind it, but here the change didn't "touch" me, so I wasn't affected by it intellectually or emotionally, and was thus disappointed.
* "Down and Out in the Year 2000"--I missed the point of this story when I originally read it in Asimov's, because at the time I was (and still am, to some extent) enamoured of cyberpunk. This story is Stan's rebuttal to Neuromancer (and its high-tech/low-life ilk), in which he says low-life can't afford high-tech, not only to be able to own it, but to have the education necessary to be able to use it, or the mind-set. Entirely valid point and interestingly accomplished in the story; however, I'm not sure that the story holds up by itself, instead requiring a knowledge of the background of its criticism for its true punch.
* "Our Town"--Too short, and felt very similar to other stories of elites (like Silverberg's "Sailing to Byzantium"). Given a longer story, with more plot/description/substance, I might have been more impressed.
* "A Transect"--Reminded me of Bishop's "Apartheid, Superstrings, and Mordecai Thubana," which I feel conveys the same point, but done better.
* "The Lunatics"--Another story that I didn't quite get on the first reading. Followed it better this time, but still had a sense of uncomprehension at the ending.
* "Zurich"--Heavily autobiographical; once the story moves from the obsessive cleaning to the metaphysical "you won't be here again," it lost its appeal for me.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Groundbreaking, But..., Sep 19 2001
By doomsdayer520 (Pennsylvania) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
Kim Stanley Robinson has justly been praised for the fact that his work, which ably combines science fiction and historical research, has broken new ground in fiction writing. Unfortunately, some of the stories in this collection prove that breaking new ground doesn't necessarily mean your stories are readable or believable. Robinson sometimes has trouble encouraging you to care about the point or the moral in his offbeat ideas. The worst example of this problem here is the ridiculous "Zurich" in which a man gets too much bleach on his fingers and finds that he can turn anything white - an interesting premise but Robinson's attempt to transform this into a treatise on social consciousness is a failure. Other offenders are the sappy "The Part of Us That Loves" and "Glacier" which are very awkward attempts to mix morality and speculative fiction. However, I would recommend some of these stories, like the intriguing historical fiction/sci-fi tales "Muir on Shasta" and "Vinland the Dream". And this entire book is almost saved by the terrifying and disturbing "Before I Wake", a nightmarish tale about nightmares.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A must for historians!, Aug 22 2000
By S. A. Cain "librarian" (Indiana USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book might be subtitled "A Future History of Earth" because of Robinson's speculation about where our civilization is headed. He explores alternate histories as well as possible (and plausible) futures. My favourite story was the one where the Viking discovery of North America was all an elaborate 19th-century hoax!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Robinson reveals himself as a true literary talent
Kim Stanley Robinson is known for being one of the more literary science fiction writers around, but you wouldn't necessarily know it from reading his most popular works. Read more
Published on April 17 2000

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