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Black Projects, White Knights: The Company Dossiers
 
 

Black Projects, White Knights: The Company Dossiers (Hardcover)

by Kage Baker (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 37.95
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Black Projects, White Knights: The Company Dossiers + Gods And Pawns + The Graveyard Game
Total List Price: CDN$ 72.85
Price For All Three: CDN$ 52.92

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Product Details


Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

This excellent collection brings together 14 of Baker's short stories about "The Company," three of them unpublished. Select humans have been plucked from various epochs and turned into enhanced, immortal, time-traveling cyborgs, programmed to do the shadowy bidding of the profit-loving Company. Unable to fight their own programming, the best of them try to fulfill the Company's directives while being kind to the mortal "sheep" they live among ("Noble Mold" and "Studio Dick Drowns Near Malibu"). Their jobs and lives are complicated by warring Company factions ("Old Flat Top"), which certain mortals see as heavenly battles ("The Hotel at Harlan's Landing"). Also included are the first four tales about the mysterious, genetically enhanced Alec Checkerfield ("Smart Alec," "The Dust Enclosed Here," "Monster Story" and "The Likely Lad"), as well as two other stories ("The Literary Agent" and "The Wreck of the Gladstone") that obliquely pertain to his origins and influences. Baker shows greater range with these stories than she does in her novels (In the Garden of Eden, etc.), and has more fun with her characters, letting them play at being pirates, dig up mummies or interact with Shakespeare and Robert Louis Stevenson. Though the collection brings up troubling ethical questions about the nature of the author's future history (since Alec is referred to as Adonai, does that mean he is God?), Baker masterfully handles characters and plots. These stories rank among the finest recent work in the field.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist

What could be better than a new novel of the Company? A collection of the Company's mysterious, powerful operatives' highly entertaining adventures--that's what. Plucked from their lives in times ranging from neolithic California to the twenty-fourth century, those cybernetically enhanced agents are dispatched to later eras to discover (i.e., steal) rare plants, art treasures, and literary masterpieces. In "Old Flat Top," an enterprising Cro-Magnon boy finds the hermit atop a mountain much older and less peaceful than anyone suspected. In "The Literary Agent," casually hip Joseph negotiates with feverish Robert Louis Stevenson to develop an adventure flick to be produced hundreds of years later. Particularly appealing in several stories is young Alex, born, or at least delivered, to wealthy, dissolute parents in the highly regimented twenty-fourth century. His brain isn't quite like other children's, and his gift for rewiring computer systems is astonishing. His liberating encounter with the dispirited hologram of Shakespeare in "The Dust Enclosed Here" will satisfy every lover of the bard. Funny, poignant, thought-provoking, altogether excellent stories. Roberta Johnson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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8 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Some fascinating history of "The Company", April 8 2004
By David Roy (Vancouver, BC) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
Fans of Kage Baker's "Company" novels may not realize that the series actually was first published in short story form. As she states in her introduction to "Noble Mold," this story was published in Asimov's magazine while In the Garden of Iden was still looking for a publisher. After The Graveyard Game was published, she decided to collect a bunch of Company short stories from Asimov's (and they always appeared in Asimov's) into a book. The result, along with three new stories and a new introduction, is Black Projects, White Knights. These stories range from the mundane to the bizarre, but all have that distinctive Baker touch that makes them readable.

We are first introduced to all of the characters that will be featured in the coming stories, under the cover of a spy into the Company's records bringing up dossiers on all of the major players in the series (and the stories as well). "The Hounds of Zeus" will eventually tie into the series itself (Baker has hinted as such), but for now it is a suitable summary of who everybody is. We then get into the stories, and the wild ride begins. As in most short story collections, there are some standouts and some weaker stories. Surprisingly, I found the stories starring Mendoza to be among the lesser works, though they were still interesting. She features in three of them ("Noble Mold," "Lemuria Will Rise!", and "Hanuman"), but none of them spring off the page. While the potential of these stories is surely there, I found the writing of the first two stories to be lacking (especially "Noble Mold, but it was her first story so it's excusable).

As usual, Joseph stars in the best stories, with "The Literary Agent" being the best of the bunch. In this one, Joseph interacts with Robert Louis Stevenson during his three-day stint on a mountain in California where he almost died. Joseph comes to see if he can get Stevenson to write a screenplay for him so that his "masters" can have an original work by him to film (it seems they've already adapted all of the books Stevenson has or will have written). Baker captures Hollywood perfectly, with Joseph submitting the screenplay ideas and then having them rejected, or accepted with some "slight changes." The story is a riot from beginning to end and I couldn't stop laughing through all of it. It's fast-paced and Baker captures the personalities perfectly.

An interesting addition to the Company mythos is a series of stories about Alec Checkerfield, a young boy living in a time near the "Silence" (2355, or the year that the Company is working toward, which nothing is known about what happens afterward). Checkerfield's stories show us how ugly the world has become, where an adult can't even hug a child in public without a license for fear of being taken away as a possible child molester. Alec is a young boy who doesn't know his place in the world. His parents have left him (though there's some doubt that he's even their child) and he's being raised by his "father's" servants. He has reprogrammed his electronic "child companion" so that he can break all of the social norms of current society. He's very intelligent, and he's going to be a force to be reckoned with someday. The book contains three stories about Alec at various stages of his growth, with the final one taking place when he's 16. Baker obviously has plans for him, but I have no idea what they could be. The stories themselves aren't that interesting other than in showing the future world, with the exception of "The Dust Enclosed Here." In this story, Alec meets a hologram of William Shakespeare in a museum. Shakespeare's plays have been forbidden for being too violent, but his sonnets are well liked and they have created a semi-sentient hologram of him to entertain the public. Alec comes in and gives old Will a lot more sentience then he bargained for. The interplay between the two of them crackles and the story is witty yet slightly frightening. It's another standout in the book.

Other stories give interesting insights into some of the characters we've seen in previous Company novels, giving some history to them and making them more complete (especially if you've read the stories before reading the books). While I didn't think any of these stories stood out among the ones already mentioned, I thought they were interesting, well-written, and had some good characterization. Baker is a great short story writer, and even the lesser efforts in this book are well worth reading. The new stories are about extremely minor characters, and thus aren't quite as interesting as the rest. The exception is "The Queen in Yellow," which is a rollicking adventure of Lewis, the Literature Preservationist and friend of Mendoza, and his adventures in an Egyptian archeological dig in 1914. There's a weird professor, an immortal woman controller who's not above using her wiles to get what she wants, and good old Lewis stuck in the middle. Having just read The Graveyard Game, I found it interesting to hear a bit about Lewis' past, and Baker again excels in the characterization department.

If you're a fan of the Company books, Black Projects, White Knights is a valuable addition to the whole story. You won't get any big insights into the ongoing plot, but you will get to see some of your favourite characters in some interesting situations, and you'll get to experience Kage Baker, the short story writer. It's well worth the time and investment.

David Roy

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5.0 out of 5 stars Move Over OHenry  Kage Baker has arrived, Jul 29 2003
By Avid Reader (Franklin, Tn) - See all my reviews
What a surprise!! I was expecting little vignettes of Company life with the same roster of characters but the depth and variety of characters, settings and plots was simply stunning. Maybe it is true that the short story - as opposed to the novel, poem, saga, chant or song - is the real American art form. If so, then Ms. Baker has accepted that challenge with gusto.

The author is said to be a fan of the X-Files and in that show, one quickly grew tired of monsters and weirdos, yearning instead for the ever-changing, ever-evolving mythology which girded the series. The Zeus books follow a similar pattern. If "The Garden of Iden" is almost childlike - you might say innocent - the following tales evolved into philosophical treatises on the nature, reason and ultimate fate of time travel and, more than anything, the mysterious Chronos Corporation and its hidden agenda.

These are splendid stories although it is imperative that one is first acquainted with the preceding novels to which they allude. The sequence seems random but one discovers a serial-like order of presentation. The young lad with the extraordinary powers shows up several times and the attentive reader will discern both the hows and whys of his origin. Some of these stories sound boring in the extreme until the first paragraph. Suddenly you are caught in the web spun by the author and the only escape is finishing the tale.

Some are tongue-in-cheek (Lemuria), some are explanatory (Search for the Delacroix), others are reflective of the author's great interest in English history (Shakespeare). All possess that unique "Baker" quality that permeates her works - the excellent turn of phrase, the fidelity to the character and the times, the occasional surprise and the relentless movement of the logic to its conclusions, tragic, maudlin or triumphant. Many of these could easily be developed into novels, a task I hope the author will undertake in the future

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5.0 out of 5 stars Move Over - O'Henry, Kage has arrived, Jul 15 2003
By Avid Reader (Franklin, TN) - See all my reviews
What a surprise!! I was expecting little vignettes of Company Life with the same roster of characters but the depth and variety of characters, settings and plots was stunning. Maybe it is true that the short story - as opposed to the novel, poem, saga, chant or song - is the real American art form. If so, then Ms. Baker has accepted the challenge with gusto.

The author is said to be a fan of the X-Files and in that show, one quickly grew tired of monsters and weirdos, yearning instead for the ever-changing, ever-evolving mythology which undergirded the series. The Zeus books follow a similar pattern. If "The Garden of Iden" is almost childlike - you might say innocent - the following tales evolved into philosophical treatises on the nature, reason and ultimate fate of time travel and, more than anything, the mysterious Chronos Corporation and its hidden agenda.

These are splendid stories although it is imperative that one is first acquainted with the preceding novels to which they allude. The sequence seems random but one discovers a serial-like order of presentation. The young lad with the extraordinary powers shows up several times and the attentive reader will discern both the hows and whys of his origin. Some of these stories sound boring in the extreme until the first paragraph. Suddenly you are caught in the web spun by the author and the only escape is finishing the tale.

Some are tongue-in-cheek (Lemuria), some are explanatory (Search for the Delacroix), others are reflective of the author's great interest in English history (Shakespeare). All possess that unique "Baker" quality that permeates her works - the excellent turn of phrase, the fidelity to the character and the times, the occasional surprise and the relentless movement of the logic to its conclusions, tragic, maudlin or triumphant. Many of these could easily be developed into novels, a task I hope the author will undertake in the future.

Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


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Most recent customer reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars NOt as good as it ought to have been . . .
I've enjoyed the author's four "Dr. Zeus, Inc." novels -- well, the first three considerably more than the most recent one -- but this volume is an example of the truism that... Read more
Published on Jul 2 2003 by Michael K. Smith

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
This collection of fifteen short stories features characters from Kage Baker's Company novels, including Mendoza, Joseph, Lewis, and the mysterious Alec Chesterfield. Read more
Published on Mar 3 2003 by Sophia

5.0 out of 5 stars Lots of fun
This is a fun collection of stories fleshing out the workings of the Company even further. A very enjoyable read for any fan of The Company novels.
Published on Feb 14 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding insights into history and character
The 'Company' sends its immortal cyborg operatives throughout time digging up extinct life forms, destroyed artworks, and lost writings--which it then sells at a handsome profit... Read more
Published on Feb 5 2003 by booksforabuck

5.0 out of 5 stars Layers and Crevices...
I've been following Kage Baker's "Company" series of novels for a few years now, but it was only with the publication of this book that I discovered just how many "Company" short... Read more
Published on Sep 14 2002 by Carl Malmstrom

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