SM Stirling commented here that:
"All fiction is in conversation with all other fiction..."
Sometimes it seems that all literature is one long series:
Troy (Homer);
Rome (Virgil);
the Holy Roman Empire (the Song of Roland);
English history (Shakespeare);
the British Empire (Kipling);
forward to the Terran Empire (Poul Anderson);
sideways to the Angrezi Raj (Stirling).
In Neil Gaiman's The Sandman: The Doll's House, personified Desire looks at the symbol of her older brother, personified Dream, and says:
"Big brother...I'm watching you."
Thus, a fantasy character alludes to a dystopia - two antithetical genres both addressed by both Anderson and Stirling.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeletePoul Anderson, as we know, wrote some dystopian stories. Examples being "Murphy's Hall" and "Welcome." But, not as far as I can recall, any dystopian novels. Stirling did THAT with his four gruesome Draka books!
Sean