FICTION
****
Hunter's Run
By George R. R. Martin, Gardner Dozois, and Daniel Abraham
When the hunted becomes the hunter.
On a planet named for the Brazilian city Sao Paulo, a small group
of human colonists are scraping by, working as laborers for the alien
landlords. It takes all types to make a world; one type is the hardened
prospector only in it for the cash, represented here by Ramon Espejo.
After killing a foreign dignitary in a bar fight, Espejo decides to go
on the run, only to find himself the unwilling predator in an alien game
of cat and mouse. Literally tethered to an alien warrior, Espejo is
forced to pursue a member of his own species--and in the process finds
out what it means to be human.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Eos. 320 pages. $25.95. ISBN: 006137329X
Fantasybookcritic ****
"Even though it took thirty years for Hunter's run to see
publication, the tale is a timeless one and is just as relevant today as
it would be in the 70s. ... I just had a blast exploring the book's
alien setting, and once again find myself wishing that more authors
would do the same." ROBERT THOMPSON
SciFi Weekly ****
"The first item of business to get out of the way is the
tripartite authorship of this book. At first it seems a rather
circuslike distraction that, however, has actually resulted in a superb
fusion of talents. ... [The] book reads like the work of one melded
intelligence, seamless and organic." PAUL DIFILLIPPO
SFSignal.com ****
"Hunter's Run is a solid, well-constructed and wholly
entertaining story." JOHN DENARDO
CRITICAL SUMMARY
In music, supergroups of established artists are rarely greater
than the sum of their parts. The same often goes for science fiction,
but critics agreed that these three authors beat the trend by producing
a tight, consistent novel. Whether because of Martin's decades of
collaborative work, Dozois's long career as an editor, or
Abraham's fresh prose style, every reviewer said the book seemed as
if it were written by one person. The only complaint came from reviewers
who had read an earlier, novella-length version of the story; they felt
that expanding the story enriched it somewhat, but not by much. While it
would be hard to match Hunter's Run with any of these authors'
previous works, it can certainly be called a successful experiment--and
a compelling SF novel.
****
Matter
By Iain M. Banks
Culture shock.
In Banks's long-running Culture series of novels, an advanced
interstellar civilization that has transcended physical limitations and
material needs occasionally intervenes in the affairs of lesser species.
In this installment (after Look to Windward [2000]), two medieval
kingdoms occupying different levels within a hollow world are at war. As
one emerges victorious, its king is murdered, and a treacherous adviser
moves to control the throne. The forces of the Culture are soon pulled
into the affair--not only because the king's daughter is one of its
agents but also because this seemingly backwards world may be more than
it seems.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Orbit. 608 pages. $25.99. ISBN: 0316005363
Onion A. V. Club *****
"After seven books collecting culture tales of various lengths
and experimental structures, the prolific Scottish writer has produced
an almost-perfect work of 21st-century science fiction. Combining the
hard SF of Larry Niven, Robert L. Forward, and Robert Anton Wilson with
the light, fantastic touch of Douglas Adams and Piers Anthony, Matter is
a page-turner with humor, suspense, and a huge imagination that would be
intimidating if it weren't so thoroughly humane."
DONNA BOWMAN
SFFWorld.com ****
"As with any of Iain's books to date, in Matter he deals
with the material with wit and intelligence, as well as his trademark
complexity and violence. It does manage to mix genres with aplomb, and
there are some pleasingly jarring cultural moments when aliens
intermix." MARK YON
Time ****
"The Culture novels (there are eight of them) are about the
challenges of a world in which thinking beings must deal with one
another across vertiginous gulfs of cultural and technological
difference--a world, in other words, both completely different from and
identical to our own." LEV GROSSMAN
SciFi Weekly ****
"Matter strives to strike a balance between the medieval
shenanigans on Sursamen and the galactic wonders of the Culture, but it
fails. ... Ultimately, Banks does provide a sense of a thronging milieu
of wonders." PAUL DIFILLIPPO
SFSignal.com ****
"Banks gives us his usual array of cool ideas. ... Is Matter
the best Culture novel by Banks? No, that's still Use of Weapons.
However, Matter can sit comfortably alongside Consider Phlebas for
second." J. P. FRANTZ
CRITICAL SUMMARY
It has been eight years since the last Culture novel, and critics
have clearly missed Banks's unique combination of galactic wonder
and quirky humor. Their anticipation made for high standards, and for
most critics, Matter exceeded them. Many fans of this universe enjoyed
the way Banks mixes space opera with royal intrigue, though a few felt
he does not quite pull off this cultural collision with his usual
finesse. A more common complaint concerned the book's length and
pacing. While most reviewers were, in the end, happy to immerse
themselves in 600 more pages of Culture, the novel's heft may make
it a poor entry point for readers hoping to pick up the series for the
first time. It may be best to start with the first in the series,
Consider Phlebas (1987).
COPYRIGHT 2008 Bookmarks Publishing
LLC Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.