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Stable Strategies And Others

Stable Strategies And Others

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $10.17
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of SF's least-prolific good writers....
Review: ------------------------------------------------------
Eileen Gunn is surely one of SF's least-prolific good writers, having published all of eleven stories since her debut in 1978. Fortunately, they're all worthwhile, and some are brilliant -- such as the title story, "Stable Strategies for Middle Management" (1988, Hugo nominee), a novel view of the role of bioengineering in future corporate life, guaranteed to bring a smile. Then there's "Green Fire", cowritten with Michael Swanwick, Andy Duncan, and Pat Murphy, which is just terrific: a WW2 pulp burlesque, starring Isaac Asimov and Bob Heinlein, and featuring Tesla superscience, topless pirates, giant plesiosaurs, a kraken -- and a special guest appearance by Lord Quetzalcoatl! Great stuff. SF's best-ever 4-author story!

Her third "A" story, "Nirvana High" (with Leslie What), makes its first appearance here. The special-ed students at Cobain High have, well, *special* talents, and Gunn's sfnal look at high-school life ranks right up there with Suzy McKee Charnas' [...] and Sharon Farber's "The Nostalginauts" . Top-notch story.

"Computer Friendly", a 1990 Hugo nominee, features 9-yr old Elizabeth "Lizardbreath", and how she saved her friends online and learned to spit. Cool, nerdy stuff, if a bit dated now.

And her first sale, "What Are Friends For?" (1978) is still a crackerjack -- I'd never seen it, and I'll bet you'll like it, too. Gunn notes that her check for $51.63, from Ted White's AMAZING, "came in someone else's SASE, with their name crossed out and mine scrawled in... I had hit the big time."

And there's more! Bottom line: 11 stories, 5 "A"s, 6 "B"s -- plus an "ideologically labile" recipe, and cool little Gunnophile goodies from Gibson, Swanwick, and Waldrop. "Open [the book] and be dazzled! -- JP Kelly's blurb, with a coverful of other nice blurbs, from Le Guin, Doctorow, Willis, and many more.


So, you owe it to yourself to check out Eileen Gunn's neat stories. As Michael Swanwick sings,

"Hooray for Eileen and her bully machine...
She's graced with a runcible style...
Lets all celebrate
Before it's too late...
Eileen! -- and her bully machine."




Rating: 5 stars
Summary: At last!, at last!
Review: Eileen Gunn is one of the finest writers in any genre. Her
stories are full of wit, pith, allusion, and a lapidary placement
of words.

Because of these virtues, she writes slowly. (Howard Waldrop
claims she is the only person who produces more slowly than he.)

These stories are brilliant. With luck, Eileen will produce more.

A warning: these are not glib; read with care; and enjoy!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Huzzah!
Review: I had the pleasure of hearing Ms. Gunn read the story "Fellow Americans" at a science fiction convention. It was one of the funniest things I've ever heard. After that I made sure to attend all of her readings and seek out her work (which until now it has been shockingly hard to find.)

Impress your friends! Get in on the ground floor of Gunn-mania! Be one of the cool kids and read this as soon as possible!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Worth owning if you read short fiction in the genre
Review: I was pleased to see this as Amazon.com's #4 editorial pick. Eileen Gunn took two decades or so composing these little gems, each taken seriously and not tossed in to fill up the pages.

That said, the stories have minor flaws that do not impede the reading or its enjoyment. For instance, as far as I can discern, "Fellow Americans" is not truly a story (the others are) but a work of carefully observed characters--politicians who might have been based on meticulous research.

A truly ambitious undertaking and successful despite flaws that would have sunk lesser writers.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Gunn Canon At Last!
Review: I've been an Eileen Gunn fan for a long time and it's a treat to see her perceptive, witty stories collected for the first time. William Gibson's introduction, Howard Waldrop's afterword, and Eileen's own notes about each story add to the feeling that this unique collection was well worth the wait.


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