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The Collected Stories of Arthur C. Clarke

The Collected Stories of Arthur C. Clarke

List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $19.77
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: What could be better?
Review: All of Clarkes short stories in one volume? What could better? I checked this out of the library and then bought my own copy after about a week. There are a few spelling errors, but who cares, really? All books have a few. This book is definetely worth having.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Absolutely Essential For Any SF Fan
Review: Finally, at long last, we get a (very nearly) complete collection of Arthur C. Clarke's short works all in one volume. This collection is very convenient to the ACC collector, because his short works are scattered across numerous volumes (many of which are out of print) and several are uncollected. 104 stories, nearly 1,000 pages... all classic Clarke works. His first published story Travel By Wire! (1937) is here, as is his most recent Improving The Neighborhood (1999), his only collaboration The Wire Continium (with Stephen Baxter, 1998), and similar novelties. The stories range in length from 33 words to over 18,000. There is also a nice introduction from Clarke. Prefaced to each story are notes on when and where it was first published (very useful information to the Clarke collector), what ACC retrospectives it has since appeared in, and (most of the time) some brief notes on the story from Clarke. The stories collected here are widely varying, from absolute classics of the genre like The Star, The Nine Billion Names of God, The Lion of Comarre, The Wall of Darkness, All The Time In The World, Breaking Strain, etc.; to "seed" shorts like The Sentinel, Guardian Angel, Earthlight, The Songs of Distant Earth, The Hammer of God, etc.; to light-hearted, hilarous SF romps like the numerous "White Hart" tales, Trouble With the Natives, How We Got To Mars (previouly uncollected), and more. With all these extras in mind, along with the fact that it contains several previously uncollected stories, this book is essential not only to the Clarke newbie, but also to the hardcore admirer who already owns most everything he has ever written. This long-awaited omnibus is truly an absolute must-own for any science fiction fan. Period.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Much-needed collection, but...
Review: It was about time somebody collected all of Clarke's short stories into one volume. I looked forward eagerly to re-reading them (I wore out my '50s and '60s paperbacks of Clarke's stories long ago). Sadly, the poor copyediting ruined this book for me. Tor must have hired some minimum-wage illiterate to keypunch the stories, then neglected to proofread any of them. There are mispellings on every page ("BEWARD OF LIONS"), and whole lines (or worse) are completely missing from many of the stories! (A whole *series* of paragraphs was missing from one of my favorite stories, "Superiority".)

I'm almost sorry I bought this book. You can buy it for its historical significance, but expect to be disappointed by its quality.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Much-needed collection, but...
Review: It was about time somebody collected all of Clarke's short stories into one volume. I looked forward eagerly to re-reading them (I wore out my '50s and '60s paperbacks of Clarke's stories long ago). Sadly, the poor copyediting ruined this book for me. Tor must have hired some minimum-wage illiterate to keypunch the stories, then neglected to proofread any of them. There are mispellings on every page ("BEWARD OF LIONS"), and whole lines (or worse) are completely missing from many of the stories! (A whole *series* of paragraphs was missing from one of my favorite stories, "Superiority".)

I'm almost sorry I bought this book. You can buy it for its historical significance, but expect to be disappointed by its quality.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Seminal Arthur C. Clarke Collection
Review: Sir Clarke himself gathered his own pithy "Golden Age" sci-fi short stories for the reader to peruse, and (unforgiveably numerous typesetting errors aside) what a selection here. In chronological order, he begins with his fine early work ("Rescue Party", "The Sentinel") and propels the reader into vignettes of lost space missions, time travel, and apocalyptic warnings from lunar monolith-depositing super beings. This anthology makes a convincing case for Clarke, who is the most commercially successful writer of the genre but hasn't received the critical acclaim given Heinlein, Bradbury, or Asimov. It's really not fair. Clarke so cleverly buries social commentary into his best work ("Imperial Earth") that the reader is lured into wondering whether the technical surroundings of his characters was a bi-product of his physics degree from the Royal Academy of Science or a result of early mentor/editor John W. Campbell's demand for commercial success in a post-WWII war-weary literary world. At any rate, Clarke is pleading with earthers to stop pointing those nasty lasers at each other and just get along. Or else.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: none
Review: The Collected Stories of Arthur C. Clarke is a splendid and entertaining plethora of all of Clarke's stories to date. From the hilarious first forays into SF (the previously uncollected 'How We Got To Mars') through all of his classics (The Sentinel, Earthlight, The 9 Billion Names Of God, and Songs Of Distant Earth, to just name a few), and right up to his most recent 'Improving the Neighborhood'. Clarke, truly one of the originators in the field of hard SF, has, and always will, influence SF writers for generations to come... Gary S. Potter Author/Poet.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great content but terrible proof-reading
Review: The number of typos and other errors in this book is astounding. I love all of these stories and am happy to have them all in one volume, but the incredibly bad editing is unforgivable -- Clarke deserves better.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great content but terrible proof-reading
Review: The number of typos and other errors in this book is astounding. I love all of these stories and am happy to have them all in one volume, but the incredibly bad editing is unforgivable -- Clarke deserves better.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: An enjoyable read
Review: They've brought out another edition and they seem to have proofread it this time; I only noticed a small handful of errors in nearly 1000 pages. (At least, the edition I got in the UK was fine.) So don't be put off by tales of dreadful misspellings, the danger has passed.

It's a nice little collection of stories, although not quite as good as I expected from his reputation. This is partly personal preference: I'm not terribly interested in space travel, which is the subject of the majority of stories, I prefer sociologically/philosophically based science fiction, and it's very difficult to write science fiction that doesn't date somewhat (aliens sporting tentacles and names consisting only of consonants, bless them).

His style slightly reminded me of John Wyndham (I find both rather sweet and extraordinarily oblivious of feminism), and shared Wyndham's concern that we're going to do a great job of sending ourselves to a variety of hells if we don't watch out, satirising human prejudices and wars. The humourous stories were a lovely surprise and frequently had a clever sting in the tail, for instance the one about the man who tries to train a giant carnivorous orchid to munch up his irritating aunt, or the chap who designs the sets and equipment for a trashy space opera and ends up being picked up by aliens for accidentally revealing their state secrets. He also provided a new take on old cliches, such as suggesting that if aliens were to try to contact us, it wouldn't be all that straightforward: we'd either not take them seriously, or get the planet demolished by the rudeness of our reception, or they'd take one look and not believe their eyes. Well, he could have a point.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: (almost) Comprehensive Collection of an SF Grand Master
Review: This book is heavy and inconvenient to carry around. The spellings are all British. "The Curse" is inexplicably renamed as "Nightfall". "At The Mountains of Murkiness" is missing.--But none of these gripes matter at all. The fact is, this is a (nearly-)comprehensive collection of all the short fiction of one of the three greatest authors to write Science Fiction. It includes the stories that made the Science Fiction Hall of Fame ("The Nine Billion Names of God" and "The Star"), stories that grew to more famous works ("The Sentinel," which formed part of the basis for Clarke & Kubrick's _2001: A Space Odyssey_ [both the novel and film]; "Guardian Angel," which grew to become Clarke's best novel, _Childhood's End_; and "The Songs of Distant Earth" and "The Hammer of God," which grew to the novels of the same name), light-hearted works (including all the classic _Tales of the White Hart_ and the more recent "Steam-Powered Word Processor"), and serious works (such as "Breaking Strain" and the aforementioned "Star"). This is surely the greatest single volume of short Science Fiction ever published. Recommended unreservedly.


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