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   Book Info

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Space Stations  
Author: Martin H. Greenberg
ISBN: 0756401763
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Booklist
This neat little theme anthology contains a satisfying mixture of old hands' and newcomers' stories. In the opener, Timothy Zahn's "The Battle of Space Fort Jefferson," a space fort that is crumbling into disrepair as an unpopular tourist destination wins its first battle--finally--though only by means of the vagaries of decaying equipment. In Jean Rabe's "Auriga's Streetcar," a gem of a piece, an old "spacer" finds herself on the way to a distant star in the belly of an even older space observatory towed by unknown aliens. Robert J. Sawyer's "Mikeys" relates the work of those who go almost to the target and the unexpected event that brings them to the forefront. The closer, Gregory Benford's "Station Spaces," is a doozy about what happens when human merges with machine, and the building of human habitation on Luna. Despite, or possibly as a result of, a literally (i.e., spacially) limited topic, these stories cover a lot of ground. Regina Schroeder
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Book Description
15 all-new stories of tomorrow from 15 of the best sci-fi writers of today

The challenge and lure of space exploration has long been fertile ground for some of the finest science fiction stories. Here, fifteen of the best chroniclers of the day after tomorrow present unique tales of space stations both in our own solar system and far beyond.




Space Stations

FROM OUR EDITORS

The Barnes & Noble Review
Space Stations is an anthology of 14 original short stories about -- you guessed it! -- space stations, the habitats that will some day be our stepping stones to the stars. Featured authors include Timothy Zahn, Alan Dean Foster, Julie E. Czerneda, and Gregory Benford.

Two selections of note have similar settings: the moons of Mars. Robert J. Sawyer's "Mikeys" is about two B-team astronauts (nicknamed Mikeys after Apollo 11's command-module pilot, Mike Collins, the astronaut who stayed in orbit while Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the moon) who are stationed on Deimos while the A-team astronauts get to make the historic first walk on the red planet. But while the Mikeys are setting up the station on the tiny satellite, they find something that will chisel their names in the history books forever! Eric Kotani's "Orbital Base Fear" revolves around a race to see who can walk on Mars first -- the USA-led spaceship or the European consortium ship. The American ship, which has a substantial lead, plans to land on Phobos, set up a station, and then send a shuttle down. The European ship is going straight in -- never mind the massive sandstorm.

What makes this collection remarkable is that while the stories have a hard science fiction underpinning (nuclear fusion￯﾿ᄑpowered spaceships, ancient alien technology, quantum geometries, event horizons, and wormholes), the stories are powered by strong, memorable human characters. Surprisingly compelling, wide ranging, and highly entertaining, Space Stations is everything a good anthology should be. Paul Goat Allen

FROM THE PUBLISHER

15 all-new stories of tomorrow from 15 of the best sci-fi writers of today

The challenge and lure of space exploration has long been fertile ground for some of the finest science fiction stories. Here, fifteen of the best chroniclers of the day after tomorrow present unique tales of space stations both in our own solar system and far beyond.

Author Biography:

     



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