Mary Shelley's Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus:
follows Aeschylus' Prometheus Bound and Percy Shelley's Prometheus Unbound and is followed by Brian Aldiss' Frankenstein Unbound;
quotes John Milton's Paradise Lost which is an epic retelling of the Biblical Genesis;
is the first modern science fiction novel according to Brian Aldiss;
is pivotal between Gothic fiction and sf just as Superman is pivotal between sf and superheroes;
is a novel about science and mankind;
asks whether God was right to create Adam and whether Frankenstein was right to create the monster.
Poul Anderson's sf novel, Genesis:
asks whether post-organic intelligences will be right to re-create extinct humanity;
was published at the summit of Anderson's career;
presents technological extrapolation that will not be outmoded in the foreseeable future;
is a future history on a Stapledonian time-scale;
like Aldiss' Galaxies Like Grains Of Sand, combines the Wellsian/Stapledonian and Heinleinian future history models.
The other two traditions are from HG Wells' The Time Machine to Anderson's Time Patrol and from Robert Heinlein's Future History to Anderson's Technic History.
12 comments:
Sympathies on the move. 4 moves = 1 house fire...
Thanks, I think. Was the house fire yours?
Paul: no, that's an old proverb.
BTW, does anyone know of a kindle edition that includes the original TIME PATROL stories? If so, what's the title?
I can't help you there.
Kaor, Mr. Stirling!
Unfortunately, neither do I. But I do have a copy of the 1961 Gollancz edition of GUARDIANS OF TIME, collecting the first four Time Patrol stories. Which I got on Tuesday, January 30, 1979.
Ad astra! Sean
Sean: I've got that too; Im looking for an ebook version.
Kaor, Mr. Stirling!
I fear I'm an old fashioned fuddy duddy! I have nothing rational against ebooks, but I prefer to read hard copy books.
Also, assuming we survive any massive crash of civilization (unlikely, IMO), what good are ebooks will be if we can't use them?
Ad astra! Sean
Sean: I prefer hardcopy in the abstract. But I want to have the text on hand when I'm out of the house.
Kaor, Mr. Stirling!
I agree that makes sense if you are going to be away from home more than a few hours.
Even so, during trips to visit my late brother, I was still content taking one or two hard copy books with me. And sometimes purchased one or two more books in HI or FL.
Ad astra! Sean
Yes, but I'm -working- when I'm out of the house! Right now I'm home and typing with one hand because my cat's in the other and would cry if I didn't cuddle her...
Kaor, Mr. Stirling!
Ha! That was amusing and a bit touching! My family had a pug when I was a boy--and very devoted to me and my father. She was happy lying down next to me or my father.
Your cat's need to be held by you explains why you do so much of your writing at your favorite restaurants, because you can use both hands for typing there! (Smiles)
Ad astra! Seanj
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