1286 Fantasy Authors New SFF Releases FanLit Reviewers FanLit Features HOME

Magazine Monday: Asimov’s, September 2011


August 22nd, 2011  Posted by Terry Weyna

Asimov's Science Fiction June 2011The September 2011 issue of Asimov’s Science Fiction is a mixed bag, with a couple of amazing stories and a few not so amazing. One of the former is “The Observation Post,” by Allen M. Steele. A recurring motif in science fiction is visitors from the future watching hot points in history, and for this story that hot point is the Cuban Missile Crisis. The story begins with a voyage in a blimp that seems fictional, like something out of a steampunk story, until one realizes that the Navy really did use a few blimps until November 1962, one month after this story takes place. Placed up against this reality that feels fictional, Steele puts something fictional that feels real: observers watching how events play out in alternative universes, and pinpointing precisely what action causes what reaction.

“The Odor of Sanctity,” by Ian Creasey, posits the existence of a device called the Olvac, which can record and disperse scents. The dispersal doesn’t make the device sound much different from a Glade air freshener, but a recorder of scents is something new. Creasey doesn’t make as much of the evocative nature of scent as he might, but then, that’s not what he’s after here. His story is more about the intersection of religion and money, commerce and charity, and how doing the right thing can sometimes mean doing the wrong thing as well. It’s an interesting commentary that made me think about Mother Teresa and the controversy about whether she was a shrewd manipulator and even blackmailer of businesses, or a saintly figure who merely pushed business leaders to be their better selves. This story gives the reader a lot more to think about than a new invention.

An espionage story by Alan Wall, “Burning Bibles,” plays on fears of Islamist violence combined with our continuing fascination with extra – well, here, intrasensory perception, but really, they amount to the same thing.  In a world like ours, where everything that goes wrong is chalked up to terrorism, it’s sometimes the quotidian that goes unnoticed.

I liked “Grandma Said,” R. Neube’s story about a teenage delinquent on a planet that’s not Earth in a future that seems distant, though the human condition seems much like today’s. The law includes a Delinquency Act that requires teenagers to work for three hours a day to keep them out of trouble – and that’s on top of school. The first-person narrator of this tale has chosen to work with the Plague House, fighting the highly contagious cholly plague, much to his mother’s dismay (which seems to be one of the very reasons he chose that type of work – again, much like teenagers everywhere, in every time). His adventures with the plague, other depressed teenagers, and a helicopter parent oddly combine to make for a story that will have you chuckling, just as prescribed by Grandma.

Robert Reed’s “Stalker” is a chilling story about robotic support for a budding serial killer. It’s a nice example of how to use the second person voice to make a story dark enough to linger in the reader’s imagination at midnight. I thought this an excellent combination of a thriller with a science fictional concept.

“Shadow Angel” is confusing and chaotic, but its author, Erick Melton, seems to want it that way to convey the experience of piloting through space-time. I found the story difficult to follow even after several readings. One cannot tell the dive-dream from the hallucination from the actual experience of piloting (“diving”), much less past from present from future. I suspect Melton’s forthcoming novel set in this universe will not be for me.

Carol Emshwiller’s “Danilo” is a sad, strange story of two women looking for men to love. They are not women from our world, though they seem much like us in many ways. They seem to be poor, at best one step above homeless; perhaps that is why they dream of finding happiness. One woman pretends she has, that a man is coming for her in the spring, and she sets out to meet him. Another woman follows her, ostensibly to protect her from herself, but ultimately, it seems, because she, too, wants the happiness the other woman has found in her dream. It is a sad story about loneliness, poverty and the strength of hope.

This issue also contains plenty of poetry. Two of the six poems are quite fine. Bruce Boston’s “The Music of Robots” has some lovely imagery – a strange word to describe writing about sound, but still apt.  The final two stanzas will stay with me like a tune. “Stone Roach,” by Fiona Moore, is a sturdy tribute to a species that will probably outlive the human race.

Finally, Robert Silverberg’s customary “Reflections” column describes a bit of Japanese history that was entirely new to me, about a method of government in place for a time that seems mostly unique. Oddly enough, though, Silverberg used a very similar design in his Majipoor books, without knowing the history. Paul di Filippo contributes an informative review column about publishers who are working to preserve the heritage of science fiction and fantasy, looking at books that are unlikely to be reviewed in any depth elsewhere. If this column introduces even a handful of new readers to Theodore Sturgeon, it will have done its job; he is one of the finest short story writers ever to work in the genre.

Asimov’s is available in traditional paper, as well as in just about any downloadable format you might require, be it as a download to your desktop, laptop, tablet or telephone; or for Kindle, Nook or Sony eReader.

  • email
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Leave a Comment

Fill in your details below or


      Copyright © 2007-2012 Fantasy Literature's Fantasy Book and Audiobook Reviews. All rights reserved.




  • RSS
  • Newsletter
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Google+
  • Digg
  • Delicious
  • Slider


Join us at Google+
We have 2970 fantasy book reviews.
Random FanLit Review:
    In the Garden of Iden: Historical science fiction romance: In the Garden of Iden by Kage Baker Rescued from the dungeons of the Spanish Inquisition, feisty little Mendoza is enrolled in a special school and becomes a cyborg agent of The Company, a group of immortal merchants and scientists who travel backwards in time...


RECENT DISCUSSION:
Mary Anderson: Awesome news from Janny Wurts. Been a fan for many years and always psyched to see the next volume in the works!...
Kat Hooper: Tizz, I even looked it up in the print book just to make sure that was the word, even though it was obvious from the context....
Kat Hooper: I really like Matthew Hughes -- I've got to read that To Hell and Back series....
Marion Deeds: TWO RAVENS AND ONE CROW -- I think they were in the redwwod tree behind my house during the eclipse. Delightful, enticing title!...
Maria (BearMountainBooks): Greatly looking forward to the Jim Hines novel!!...
John Hulet on Facebook: LOL... Can I like my own review?...
Tizz: Like Marion, I read this back in the 70s and had a similar reaction to yours even then. Not surprised to hear it hasn't aged well. As to "diMEZZni" -...
Nora-Adrienne Deret: I actually have most of the series on my bookshelf still. I enjoyed reading them and so did my eldest son....
Bill Capossere: Just remembered. He and his mates do get pretty drunk in one scene, though they do pay for it the day . .....
Marion Deeds: Hmm. I picked up this book back in the 1970s and tried to read it; didn't get very far. I'm please to see that I didn't miss something vital! Thanks, ...
Kat Hooper: Thanks, Bill! I'll pick this up for Jesse....
Bill Capossere: word-wise, difficult for a 13-yr-old though probably no different than if you gave a kid an unadapted/unabridged version of Kidnapped or Treasure Isla...
Marion Deeds: I can't WAIT! (Well, actually I kind of have to, because my coy hasn't arrived yet. But you know what I mean.)...
Kat Hooper: Yeah, the covers are really nice. Maybe later books get more original....
Kat Hooper: Bill, suitable for my 13 year old son?...
Mandy: Easing the Badger from the Dragon Reborn - what an amazingly euphemistic name!...
Marion: THE BLACK SUN'S DAUGHTER sounds intriguing,and I love Kat Richardson's stuff. I think I'm pretty much done with October Daye....
Jon Baxley on Facebook: Thanks for the friend invitation. If you or any of your friends are historical fantasy fans, check out my medieval Scottish epic, THE BLACKGLOOM BOUNT...
Terry Weyna: Seanan McGuire writes the Toby Daye books, yeah. I think you might want to try the second book in the series to see if you like it a bit better than ...
Kelly Lasiter: Yup! She even jokes on her blog about her different pen names having different fashion sense....
Marion: Okay, because I'm too lazy to look it up, @Terry, please help me. Seanan McGuire writes the October Daye series, yes? I didn't care much for the first...
Marion: The covers are neat. I think there are writers who can't decipher what makes a book magic (for me, it is often about the relationships between authent...
Maria (BearMountainBooks): It has a great cover tho!...
Derek: Wow. I have to plead ignorance to this title. My only excuse being I don't really buy any Image titles. However, I try to be aware of everything mains...
Greg Hersom: Brad- check out BattleChasers if you want to give some fantasy comics a try too. Comixology has the collection available.. Only thing is, and this i...





Admin