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| Madagascar Manifesto | | Author: | Janet Berliner | ISBN: | 1892065576 | Format: | Handover | Publish Date: | June, 2005 | | | | | | | | | Book Review | | |
Peter S. Beagle, author of The Last Unicorn "[Madagascar] Manifesto should take its place among the very few works of our time that truly deserve the title 'epic.'"
Chicago Sun-Times "Superb historical verisimilitude."
Marion Zimmer Bradley, author of Mists of Avalon "A shocking yet warmly human story. Very much worth reading."
Kevin J. Anderson, author of Dune: House Atriedes. "Children of the Dusk is a highly unusual and frightening depiction of a little-known aspect of the Holocaust."
Book Description The Madagascar Manifesto is not a work of idle fantasy. Nor is it a story purely of horror. While most of the events described in these novels are products of the authors' imaginations, they are set amidst the true history of our world. Painstakingly researched, written, rewritten, and rewritten again, the work took more than fifteen years before all three volumes finally saw publication. To Janet and George it was worth all of the effort when the final volume, Children of the Dusk, received recognition in the form of the Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a Novel in 1998. The Madagascar Plan, the cornerstone of the alternative history used in the Madagascar Manifesto, was a true proposal originated around the time of the French Revolution by one of Napoleon's advisors. During the period in which Hitler was playing the role of reasoned statesman to the world outside Germany, the Madagascar Plan resurfaced and was seriously debated even in the U.S. Congress as a possible "solution to the Jewish question." While the Madagascar Manifesto is a work of fiction, it is also a reflection of some of the realities of our world which we usually prefer not to see. It is not light reading, but its rewards are an understanding of what is bright and what is dark in all of us. The Madagascar Omnibus is an omnibus collection of the three novels: Child of the Light, Child of the Journey, and the award winning Children of the Dusk.
About the Author Sometimes referred to as The Hot and Cold Team, Janet Berliner and George Guthridge have coauthored numerous short stories in addition to The Madagascar Manifesto. Many of those stories are collected in Exotic Locals (CD-ROM available from Lone Wolf Publications). Singularly, Janet Berliner is the author of Rite of the Dragon (trade paperback available from Wildside Publishing), and coauthor of The Execution Exchange. Her mosaic novel Flirting With Death, coauthored with Kevin J. Anderson, Matthew J. Costello, and F. Paul Wilson will be published by TOR/Forge in the Fall of 2002. She also created The Unicorn Sonata, which Peter S. Beagle wrote. Janet is also the editor of six anthologies, including Snapshots: Twentieth Century Mother-Daughter Fiction (coedited with Joyce Carol Oates; David R. Godine Publishers) and Peter S. Beagle's Immortal Unicorn (coedited with Peter S. Beagle; HarperCollins Publishers). Janet has also been a journalist, lecturer, teacher, translator, and editor. For his part, George Guthridge is the author of the Western Bloodletter. His short fiction has earned him three nominations for major awards, twice for the Nebula and once for the Hugo. His stories have appeared in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, Amazing Stories, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and many other magazines and anthologies. George is also an award-winning educator. For twenty years he has taught children in Alaska, where his techniques helped his students, mostly Eskimo children often considered ineducable, to thrice win national Young Problem Solvers competitions. George is currently at work on a book which uses narrative techniques to tell the story of his work, as well as his continued work as a professor in the University of Alaska Fairbanks' Distance Education Progam, working at the Dillingham campus.
Madagascar Manifesto
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