In a book that reads more like an anthology than a novel, Mike Resnick tells the kind of tall tales in which history isn't necessarily written by the winners. It's written instead by the best human, alien, and mutant storytellers this side of the Galactic Core, with a little embellishment from Willie the Bard.
At the edge of an enormous black hole on the planet Henry II, one of the Eight Henrys, rests the Outpost tavern, owned by Tomahawk. It's so far out that only heroes, villains, and adventurers "three times as big as life and twice as wide" can manage to find it. But once they do they've earned bragging rights to tell their story.
It's the kind of place where characters like Catastrophe Baker, Bet-A-World O'Grady, Cyborg de Milo, and Hurricane Smith come to hang around, swap tales, and wait for the approaching alien invasion to get close enough to bother with. However, once the aliens decimate the Navy and start to take over the Henrys, the adventurers reluctantly set off to save the universe one tall tale at a time.
Hugo and Nebula award-winner Resnick spins the stories into a novel that examines the way legend and history are created, and the philosophy that you shouldn't let the facts stand in the way of a good yarn. Fans of tall tales will love the vivid characterizations and the way Resnick shows how each character's real adventure is embellished into an even better story. --Kathie Huddleston
From Publishers Weekly
Hugo and Nebula award winner Resnick's (A Hunger in the Soul) tales are often surprising, and this novel comprised of individual narratives is no exception. The characters at the Outpost a gathering place at the outer edge of the galaxy where adventurous souls can come to drink and brag are galaxy-renowned "heroes and bandits, artists and athletes, ministers, geniuses, prostitutes, bounty hunters, gamblers, even aliens." What begins as a fun round of tale-swapping turns more serious and thoughtful as the book progresses through its three parts: "legend," "truth" and "history." Throughout the opening a war has been approaching the Outpost, and by the second segment the "heroes" are forced to fight. Resnick then changes the tone. The complexity the characters gain when their actions are described by an impartial narrator in the "truth" section elevates the book from simple entertainment. Some act with honor, some back down from everything they stand for, some show their dedication to humanity while others flee. When they reconvene and record their exploits for posterity, they reveal even more of their true natures in the ways they want history to remember themselves and others. This lightly philosophical read is a good introduction to a solid author. (May 16)his stories, "Hunting the Snark" and "Hot House Flowers."Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
The Outpost, a tavern located on the planet Henry II, serves as a watering hole for some of the galaxy's most colorful individuals each with a tale to tell. When an invasion by aliens threatens the sanctity of the Outpost, heroes and miscreants learn to cooperate to save what they truly value. Resnick (A Hunger in the Soul) peoples his latest novel with a cast of memorable characters, and the author's easy-going style lends an air of raw elegance. For most sf collections. Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
"The Outpost is highly entertaining and as smooth as a mug of eggnog-complete with the hidden bite." - Analog
"If you want a rough-and-tumble collection of tales from the frontier, look no further. Mike Resnick assembles as outlandish a collection of space frontiersmen (and women) as you'll ever find and sets them to playing 'can you top this' in an out-of-the-way corner of the galaxy. Recommended." - SF Revu
"Amusing and witty, with an agreeably ironic edge." -Kirkus Reviews
Review
"The Outpost is highly entertaining and as smooth as a mug of eggnog-complete with the hidden bite." - Analog
"If you want a rough-and-tumble collection of tales from the frontier, look no further. Mike Resnick assembles as outlandish a collection of space frontiersmen (and women) as you'll ever find and sets them to playing 'can you top this' in an out-of-the-way corner of the galaxy. Recommended." - SF Revu
"Amusing and witty, with an agreeably ironic edge." -Kirkus Reviews
Review
"The Outpost is highly entertaining and as smooth as a mug of eggnog-complete with the hidden bite." - Analog
"If you want a rough-and-tumble collection of tales from the frontier, look no further. Mike Resnick assembles as outlandish a collection of space frontiersmen (and women) as you'll ever find and sets them to playing 'can you top this' in an out-of-the-way corner of the galaxy. Recommended." - SF Revu
"Amusing and witty, with an agreeably ironic edge." -Kirkus Reviews
Book Description
Award-winning writer Mike Resnick takes us back to his wild and wooly Inner Frontier in this tall-tale of an adventure novel.
On the planet Henry II, orbiting the twin suns of Plantagenet and Tudor, at the very edge of the great black hole at the center of the Milky Way, there is a tavern called The Outpost. Through the doors of The Outpost have come the greatest heroes, villains, and adventurers of the galaxy - to drink, to brag, and to swap tales.
The Outpost is neutral territory where fighting is forbidden and blood enemies can have a drink together and tell stories of battles past. After all bounty hunters, con men, itinerant preachers, thieves, and assassins have more in common with each other than they do with the rest of the mundane galaxy.
But their pleasant life of recalling murder and mayhem is interrupted by an alien invasion, and to save their way of life these rugged individualists must try to work together for a change.
Outpost FROM OUR EDITORS
The Barnes & Noble Review
Directions: Take Pecos Bill, Paul Bunyan, Gilgamesh, Flash Gordon and Xena and throw them into a city-sized blender. Toss in a few Swiss Army knives and those guns from old 1930s westerns that never seem to run out of bullets. Add the attitude of the WWF and a couple of fat teardrop-shaped space ships straight out of Amazing magazine. Sprinkle liberally with the humor of Robert Asprin and Douglas Adams. Throw in every campfire story you've ever heard, and add a pinch of outrageousness. Shake vigorously, and pour out into the dirty glasses of
The Outpost, a kind of truck stop at the end of the line of
the universe.
Characters like Catastrophe Baker, Hellfire Van Winkle and Silicon Carney extol their exploits in tales titled "The Ship Who Purred," "The 73-Hour Rasslin' Match" and "The Girl with the Hungry Eyes." The stories are told in an "oh yeah, well I can beat that" manner where "every last one of 'em's true...'cept for them that ain't."
Warning: Keep the little ones away, though, from yarns like "Johnny Testosterone and the Temple Virgin" and "The Romantic Legend of Velvet and Leather O'Toole." This collection is definitely not for the kids.
Mike Resnick has applied his tongue quite firmly inside his cheek while merging his skills as writer and editor in a quick read about the saviors of the universe kicking back, knocking 'em down, and letting it all hang out. In addition, they take a break from airbrushing
their self-portraits to foil a galactic invasion, which
merely serves as further raw material for their exponential egos.
If books are food for the soul and the great novels are glorious feasts, then Mike Resnick's The Outpost is the Jelly Belly treats your mother warned would ruin your appetite, but you just couldn't resist. (Brad Bosley)
FROM THE PUBLISHER
On the planet Henry II, orbiting the twin suns of Plantagenet and Tudor, at the very edge of the great black hole at the center of Milky Way, there is a tavern, The Outpost. Through the doors of The Outpost have come the galaxy's greatest heroes, villains, and adventurersto drink, to brag, and to swap tales.
But their quiet life of murder and mayhem is interrupted by an alien invasion, and to save their way of life these rugged individualists must try to work together.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Hugo and Nebula award winner Resnick's (A Hunger in the Soul) tales are often surprising, and this novel comprised of individual narratives is no exception. The characters at the Outpost a gathering place at the outer edge of the galaxy where adventurous souls can come to drink and brag are galaxy-renowned "heroes and bandits, artists and athletes, ministers, geniuses, prostitutes, bounty hunters, gamblers, even aliens." What begins as a fun round of tale-swapping turns more serious and thoughtful as the book progresses through its three parts: "legend," "truth" and "history." Throughout the opening a war has been approaching the Outpost, and by the second segment the "heroes" are forced to fight. Resnick then changes the tone. The complexity the characters gain when their actions are described by an impartial narrator in the "truth" section elevates the book from simple entertainment. Some act with honor, some back down from everything they stand for, some show their dedication to humanity while others flee. When they reconvene and record their exploits for posterity, they reveal even more of their true natures in the ways they want history to remember themselves and others. This lightly philosophical read is a good introduction to a solid author. (May 16) FYI: Resnick has recently received Hugo nominations for two of his stories, "Hunting the Snark" and "Hot House Flowers." Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
VOYA
The Outpost is a bar in neutral territory in a far-flung part of the galaxy. It is a place where fighting is prohibited and the customers are space cowboys who can, within its confines, socialize with those who in other locations might be their enemies. It is a place where legends are created as tall tales of past exploits are told. Populated by larger-than-life characters with names such as Catastrophe Baker, Hellfire Van Winkle, and Three Gun Max, the bar sports a boisterous atmosphere in a lawless territory. This scenario provides the backdrop for "Legend," the first of three parts of this novel. As the Outpost's customers begin telling their stories, the narrative is a no-holds-barred, can-you-top-this session stolen between battles with alien invaders. As the fighting draws closer to the Outpost, the storytelling breaks up and everyone goes off to fight his own battles with the aliens, comprising the second part, "Fact." In the third part of the novel, "History," the war with the aliens is over and the superheroes return to the Outpost to tell their stories of the war. Willie the Bard is there to record the stories and pass them on. They mourn their friends who were lost in the fighting and tell of their exploits in ridding the galaxy of the alien invaders. This delightful, rip-roaring space-opera reminiscent of Heinlein is populated with characters who, although recognizable as archetypal heroes, have their own idiosyncrasies. The descriptive writing is action packed and fast paced. The reader does not get to know the characters well but will grasp them sufficiently to understand their attitudes and actions. It is a worthwhile read recommended for high school science fictioncollections. VOYA CODES: 4Q 2P S A/YA (Better than most, marred only by occasional lapses; For the YA with a special interest in the subject; Senior High, defined as grades 10 to 12; Adult and Young Adult). 2001, Tor, 384p, $24.95. Ages 15 to Adult. Reviewer: Rosemary Moran
Library Journal
The Outpost, a tavern located on the planet Henry II, serves as a watering hole for some of the galaxy's most colorful individuals each with a tale to tell. When an invasion by aliens threatens the sanctity of the Outpost, heroes and miscreants learn to cooperate to save what they truly value. Resnick (A Hunger in the Soul) peoples his latest novel with a cast of memorable characters, and the author's easy-going style lends an air of raw elegance. For most sf collections. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
A conglomeration of tall tales, set in Resnick's distinctive, satirical far-future universe (A Hunger in the Soul, 1998, etc.). Thomas Aloysius "Tomahawk" Hawke owns The Outpost, a bar on planet Henry II, though Reggie the robot bartender silently does most of the work. The Outpost's clienteleassorted heroes, villains, gamblers, braggarts, monomaniacs, weird aliens, and beings even strangergather to exchange whoppers; meanwhile, war draws ever closer, as the navy of the Monarchy ("they call it the Commonwealth, but out here we know what it is") is systematically blown to bits by alien invaders. Among the characters and exploits: Catastrophe Baker woos and wins a Dragon Queen, only to discover she's a little too hot to handle; alien Indians by the name of Sitting Horse and Crazy Bull; blind, deaf, mute supergenius Einstein communicates only via computer; Bet-a-World O'Grady's has a climactic showdown with High-Stakes Eddie; Faraway Jones's goes on a bizarre quest to find his beloved, Penelopehe's never met her, but he'll know her when he sees her; liberator ***Lance Sterling*** encounters Alexander the Greater; how Hurricane Smith comes to marry a giant shapeshifting bug named Langtry Lily; and . . . you get the idea. Finally, the Cyborg de Milo arrives and shames the company into joining the war against the aliens. Throughout, Willie the Bard records everything in his voluminous notebook. Amusing and witty, with an agreeably ironic edge: best taken in small doses.