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Rating: Summary: Great classic series everyone should read. Review: I recommend reading Little Fuzzy and The Other Human Race (consolidated in Fuzzy Papers, or available singly if you can find them) first. They are written by H Beam Piper, and followed nicely by Mr Tuning. The series is good for all ages, and gives us perspective and food for thought on making room for all species.
Rating: Summary: Thoughtful & Thrilling Homage/Conclusion to the Fuzzy Books Review: If you loved H. Beam Piper's first two Fuzzy Books "Little Fuzzy" and "Fuzzy Sapiens" (sometimes called "The Fuzzy Papers") then you should definitely try to track this one down.The author was authorized to write a third book to conclude the series. It is obvious he studied the previous works carefully and loves his subject. He catches the true feeling and spirit of Piper's Terran Federation, and also the underlying themes of the Self-Reliant Man and the nature of Civil Society. If that is too deep, there are also some great Gunfights! William Tuning displays his own distinct voice, and it is sometimes delightfully different from H. Beam Piper, the author of the first two novels. For those of us who love H. Beam Piper, this is an unexpected and charming look at his universe from a different angle, with much extra enjoyable information about the Terran Federation Marine Corps, Mallorysport's Tramptown, and the original origin of the race of Fuzzies. This last plotline forms the main thrust of the story and is a brilliant and logical extension of Piper's previous statements about Fuzzy physiology and genetics, while also being surprising and deeply satisfying. Mr. Tuning also somehow manages to nearly perfectly catch the personalities of the heroes and villains we have loved for almost forty years-- Jack Holloway, Ben Rainsford, Victor Grego, Hugo Ingermann, and the all rest. And his own characters--new arrivals-- fit in perfectly and positively add to the story. I should note that I have read the published version of H. Beam Piper's unfinished manusript for "Fuzzies and Other People", which was the projected third Fuzzy novel. At the time of his death, Mr. Piper did not consider this manuscript ready for publication, and I would have to agree with him. It is a pity he never got to polish and refine that novel, and more of a pity (and certainly against his intent) that this fragment was published after his death. In comparison with that, to me William Tuning's labor of love, "Fuzzy Bones" which adds to the saga of the planet Zarathustra and the race of Fuzzies is the REAL third novel. This book is clearly and cleverly thought out, fast paced, and well written, while also being true to the original stories. The final pages, although ostensibly just a simple description of an office gathering at the Native Affairs Agency on Beta Continent, have a distinct feeling of "farewell" to them, while at the same time having a slightly incongruous but deep sense of joy. I know that sounds strange, and it is hard to describe in writing, but if you are a fan, then this concluding chapter will probably raise some good emotional goosebumps and resonate deeply with you. It did that for me, anyway. This is a good writer saying goodbye to an author, setting, and characters that he loves, and those of us who also loved the works of H. Beam Piper should salute William Tuning for the fine job he did in evoking the master, and in wrapping things for him after he left us abruptly. It is strange because I don't usually think this sort of thing ever works out-- another writer continuing a beloved series after the original author's death-- but this really succeeds. In fact, "Fuzzy Bones" works so well that I prefer it to the unfinished manuscript by Piper himself. Ace books should never have published that. Does anyone know if William Tuning ever wrote anything else? Perhaps under a different name? If so, I would appreciate an email on the subject. (nkanzarian@hotmail.com) In closing-- if you are a lover of H. Beam Piper's fiction, don't pass this book up! Track it down in used condition if you have to. Even if you don't like it as much as I did (and I hope you will), at the very least it will give you something to discuss with your fellow Piper fans!
Rating: Summary: No Wonder I Couldn't Find It Review: Recently, I acquired a copy of The Complete Fuzzy and was confused. The story simply was not as I remembered it, from first reading the Fuzzy books years ago. The reason, of course, is that I had read every Fuzzy book I could get my hands on. Fuzzy Bones had completed the story so well that it had become an integral part of H. Beam Piper's universe -- to the extent that I was unaware Piper hadn't written it! This really is a "true" Fuzzy book, regardless of who wrote it.
Rating: Summary: No Wonder I Couldn't Find It Review: Recently, I acquired a copy of The Complete Fuzzy and was confused. The story simply was not as I remembered it, from first reading the Fuzzy books years ago. The reason, of course, is that I had read every Fuzzy book I could get my hands on. Fuzzy Bones had completed the story so well that it had become an integral part of H. Beam Piper's universe -- to the extent that I was unaware Piper hadn't written it! This really is a "true" Fuzzy book, regardless of who wrote it.
Rating: Summary: fuzzy bones by william tuning Review: This sequel to Piper's fuzzy series not only added another fasinating tale to the series but was done in the grand style of H Beam Piper.I sit enmeshed totally in the story every time I've read this book.Everything hold together to give a totally exciting experience.I greatly recommend this book to anyone,but exspecially to someone who has read the other two books of this collection
Rating: Summary: A really cool addition to the Fuzzy canon Review: Tuning appropriately dedicates _Fuzzy Bones_ to "Anubis, the guide from the first life to the second life" - this is, after all, the first book about the Fuzzies of Zarathustra to be written by anyone other than their creator, H. Beam Piper. At the time _Fuzzy Bones_ first saw the light of day - December, 1981 - Piper had published two Fuzzy novels, _Little Fuzzy_ and _Fuzzy Sapiens_; in the nature of things, _Fuzzy Bones_ contains massive spoilers for both of them, since it picks up a continuing cast of characters at a turning point in Zarathustran history. However, _Fuzzy Bones_ is *NOT* in sync with Piper's 3rd Fuzzy novel, because Piper's tragic death in 1964 left his estate in such a mess that the manuscript of _Fuzzies and Other People_ wasn't located and published until 1984, 3 years after _Fuzzy Bones_. Consequently, Tuning's projected results for the trial of Diamond's kidnappers and the ultimate fate of Hugo Ingermann, the sleazy lawyer who controls the Zarathustran underworld (mainly Mallorysport, its only full-fledged city) differ from Piper's actual resolution. Since Ingermann is a major character in _Fuzzy Bones_, that portion of the plot makes this an alternate history of Piper's Zarathustra instead of a seamless continuation. Apart from that - something Tuning couldn't have foreseen - he's done well in taking up Piper's mantle, and the flavor of his writing is close enough to Piper's to satisfy a craving for a new Piper story. At 47 chapters, it's about twice as long as any single Piper Fuzzy novel, but there's no makeweight. Tuning picks up 6 months after the end of _Fuzzy Sapiens_, starting with the 3 first-class passengers aboard _City of Asgard_ in the wake of the immigration boom triggered by the Pendarvis Decisions of _Little Fuzzy_. None of the 3 is a typical colonist, if there is such a thing, and each is a hook providing a window on a different section of Zarathustra, in addition to the regular cast inherited from earlier books. Master Gunnie Philip Helton's en route to Xerxes to see that the naval base is up to scratch in case of further civil unrest, given the changeover in colonial government and the sudden influx of immigrants - many of whom will wind up broke and desperate on finding that the loss of the Company charter hasn't paved the streets of Mallorysport with gold, even though much of the planet is now technically public domain. The Rev (Helton pegs him as an ex-marine) has been sent by his immediate boss to a) get him as far away as possible and b) to set up the first soup kitchen/mission on Zarathustra. Any planet settled for 25 years is bound to have a slum, immigration boom or no. (In Mallorysport, it's Junktown, and mostly owned by Hugo Ingermann.) The last of the 3 first-class passengers is also travelling for "business" reasons - Christiana Stone, taking up the oldest profession after being rather abandoned by her fiancee when she asked for help for her father. Christiana's basically a good egg, just young and naive - she has to grow up rapidly after trying to make a living in Mallorysport without knuckling under to Ivan Bowlby's control of prostitution. (We don't actually *see* Christiana doing anything "on-stage"; there aren't any explicit sex scenes in the story, although there's one mutual seduction.) After learning of her father's death within a month of her arrival on Zarathustra, Christiana has sense enough to ask the Rev for advice, and gets temp work at the Charterless Zarathustra Company. Not that the CZC is so breezy about security clearances as to take someone they can't background check in less than the year's turnaround-time it takes to communicate with Earth; she's just hired to help arrange the wedding of CEO Victor Grego's current Fuzzy-Sitter-in-Chief, Sandra. After Grego meets Christiana at the reception - explaining basic genetics to the Fuzzies, who want to know why she's strawberry-blonde but Sandra's red-haired, having noticed that humans vary much more in looks than Fuzzies do - Grego, in his usual "scientific selection" process, hires his new Fuzzy-Sitter-in-Chief on the spot. Quite typically, he overrides his security chief's protests about background checks...not knowing that he's hired a blackmail risk. The "Fuzzy bones" of the title relate to the many anomalies Piper quite deliberately not only introduced in the Fuzzies' background, but (metaphorically) flagged with flashing red lights. Why are the Fuzzies present on only one continent on Zarathustra, and why have they left so few traces in the fossil record? They're not only considered super-sane and stable, but possibly *more* intelligent than humans - but they have only low-paleolithic technology. Why do they have a critical need for trace amounts of titanium in their diet - something *very* scarce on Zarathustra? At the same time the Fuzzyologists are working on a better understanding of Fuzzies, their diet-related fertility problems, culture, and language, Colonial Governor Ben Rainsford has to cope with a Constitutional Convention whose foot-dragging has held up electing a legislature - without a legislature, the new Class-IV government can't levy taxes, and they've been running on the CZC's goodwill for nearly a year now. (He'd dearly like to shoot a couple of the worst of the delegates so that the survivors would get a grip.) The longer they stall, the worse the unemployment problem and lack of support systems among the immigrants in Mallorysport will get, and Zarathustra has some pretty grim examples in Federation history of what happens when a planet's economy and government collapse together. And always there's Hugo Ingermann in the background, pulling strings in the criminal underworld and looking to come out on top.
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