The Cuckoo's Boys
|
| Price: | $24.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
29 new or used available from $10.31
Average customer review:Product Description
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #957022 in Books
- Published on: 2005-11-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 336 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
The dozen stories in Reed's second Golden Gryphon collection (after 1999's The Dragons of Springplace) showcase this prolific author's ability to put a fresh spin on traditional SF themes. A dazzling variant on Harry Bates's classic Farewell to the Master is the spell-binding "Night of Time," in which the apparent servant is actually the master. Whereas the discovery of a message from an alien world would once have been story enough, in the ironically titled "On the Brink of That Bright New World" that revelation allows a man to get away with murdering his unfaithful wife and her lover. Sometimes, though, Reed's soaring imagination drops too easily into cloying preciosity and self-conscious wordplay, as in "River of the Queen" (a sequel of sorts to "Night of Time") or into didacticism, as in "Coelacanths." Still, Reed at his best ranks high in the SF firmament.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
The subjects of the stories in Reed's new collection range from an unexpected side effect of first contact in "On the Brink of That Bright New World," in which a man describes a crime of passion he got away with because everyone was distracted by the news, to a virtual projection of the president visiting every household in the nation on "First Tuesday." In between are more stories of first contact, including "The Children's Crusade," the titular subject of which is, depending on point of view, either much more hopeful or vastly more terrible than its namesake, for in it the income and enthusiasm of children are used to fund space missions. Reed turns to alien civilizations living together on an unimaginably vast ship in "River of the Queen" and "Night of Time" (the latter, Reed says in the afterword, may be the seed of a novel). Reed's stories afford mysterious and occasionally creepy glimpses of futures that are sometimes strange, sometimes totally familiar. Regina Schroeder
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
Customer Reviews
Misleading product description
The description of the Kindle edition of this book implies that this is the Kindle version of Robert Reed's short story collection. Not so! This is just the short story "The Cuckoo's Boys", and contain NO other stories. Buyer beware!
Outstanding Collection
Most collections of short stories such as this contain one or two good ones and several stinkers. The overall quality of these stories by Robert Reed is amazing. Highly recommended.
An Appropriate Sampling of Reed's work
If you haven't read Robert Reed before, and are simply interested in him, this is a good place to start - or as good as it gets for him. Reed's prose takes some getting used to, in that his stories are usually intricately plotted and etched with atmosphere, and his narrative comes together like a jigsaw puzzle. The payoff is in substance - his short works come off as meaty as a novel in many cases, with vivid characters and weighty dilemmas.
Much of the work in this volume deals with familiar Reed themes - flawed belief systems and hidden agendas abound - but his style makes most of them satisfying reads. For fans of his "Marrow" planet-ship mythology, 2 stories are included here, including "Night of Time," one of my favorites. The titular story is a satisfying tale of childhood and loss, and it along with "Winemaster" ranks at the top of the pile.
The story "Coelocanths" reads like a narrative experiment, new readers might find it just a little too cryptic (I did), and the story "First Tuesday" comes off (to old fans, anyway) as a rehash of the theme of his earlier "Birth Day." But Reed treats us to an informative and insightful Afterword that makes for an entertaining read.
Overall, a great sampling of Reed's short work for newcomers, and a satisfying collection for longtime fans. If it prompts more people to read his best works, such as Beyond the Veil of Stars and Marrow, all the better.




