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Star Smashers of the Galaxy Rangers

Star Smashers of the Galaxy Rangers

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A fun farce of a space opera, though a little dated.
Review: Chuck and Jerry didn't know what to expect when Jerry put cheese in the particle accelerator, but they surely didn't expect to have to end up saving the galaxy from the mind controlling Lortonoi.

This is a fun farce, though not nearly as shocking and titillating as it must have been when it first appeared in 1973.

Still, a good read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Funnier than The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Review: I am prompted to write because I just finished reading a comparable book, Douglas Adams' Hitch Hikers' Guide to the Galaxy, after hearing the radio shows many years ago. THHGTTG doesn't make its way into prose very well, and seems really dated.

By contrast, Harrison's is really sharp satire, and he uses the liberties that science fiction gives him to make his points with great force and absurd humour.

If we discover a species is stupider than we first thought, can we eat them? Who should one side with in a war; a cruel democracy or a kind dictatorship? And when does hero-worship cross the line into homoeroticism?

Harrison raises issues of politics, racism, sexism and a thousand other touchy subjects in a hilarious and outrageous book.

The galaxy's star-fleet being led by a souped-up 747 is a delightful image which sticks in my mind from this book.

Oh, and I think Harrison raided his legal textbooks to name the aliens. A garnishee is a claim you can make over someone's wages or property, and Lord Percy was an English Judge.

This book deserves to be in print again....and, especially, tobe made into a high-budget movie.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Funnier than The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Review: I am prompted to write because I just finished reading a comparable book, Douglas Adams' Hitch Hikers' Guide to the Galaxy, after hearing the radio shows many years ago. THHGTTG doesn't make its way into prose very well, and seems really dated.

By contrast, Harrison's is really sharp satire, and he uses the liberties that science fiction gives him to make his points with great force and absurd humour.

If we discover a species is stupider than we first thought, can we eat them? Who should one side with in a war; a cruel democracy or a kind dictatorship? And when does hero-worship cross the line into homoeroticism?

Harrison raises issues of politics, racism, sexism and a thousand other touchy subjects in a hilarious and outrageous book.

The galaxy's star-fleet being led by a souped-up 747 is a delightful image which sticks in my mind from this book.

Oh, and I think Harrison raided his legal textbooks to name the aliens. A garnishee is a claim you can make over someone's wages or property, and Lord Percy was an English Judge.

This book deserves to be in print again....and, especially, tobe made into a high-budget movie.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Terrific fast pace sci-fi spoof. My favourite book at school
Review: I loved this book as a teenager in High School. It was a very hard book to put down. Very entertaining, funny and full of fast paced sci-fi action. Though as much as I loved it back in 1987, I daresay I'd probably find it a bit dated now. But there were twists and turns that still made it a fantastic adventure story

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Terrific fast pace sci-fi spoof. My favourite book at school
Review: I loved this book as a teenager in High School. It was a very hard book to put down. Very entertaining, funny and full of fast paced sci-fi action. Though as much as I loved it back in 1987, I daresay I'd probably find it a bit dated now. But there were twists and turns that still made it a fantastic adventure story

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A fun farce of a space opera, though a little dated.
Review: This is one funny, funny, enjoyable book. A farcical take off on silly space operas, the action is wild, the characters hilariously idiotic, the settings imaginitive, and one of my favorite all-time endings.

But it's even funnier if you've read the grand old space operas of E.E. "Doc" Smith. This is a dead-on satire of Smith's most famous works, the "Lensman" and "Skylark" series. Harrison gets in all of Smith's trademarks: The hysterical prose, the cliffhanger chapter endings, the amazing BEMs, the questionalbe science, the all-American cardboard idiocy of the heroes, the vapidity of the heroines, the simplistic black-and-white morality, the wonderful and imaginitive settings, the jingonistic patriotism, the nonstop action, even Smith's love of a good steak. If you've read any of Smith's work (and possibly if you haven't), you'll laugh until you wet your pants.

Good hunting! Copies are kind of rare, so start now!


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