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The History of Science Fiction (Palgrave Histories of Literature)

The History of Science Fiction (Palgrave Histories of Literature)
By Adam Roberts

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Product Description

The first comprehensive critical history of the origins and development of science fiction for many decades, The Palgrave History of Science Fiction explores the genre from an international perspective and in depth. It covers SF from the ancient Greeks, through the rebirth of the genre at the Reformation, with detailed coverage of eighteenth- and nineteenth- century science fiction, and a wide-ranging account of twentieth-century sci-fi in book, film, televisual and comic book forms, concluding with an account of the current state of the genre.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1209414 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-02-10
  • Released on: 2005-01-20
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 392 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Adam Roberts is Reader in Nineteenth-Century Literature, Royal Holloway, University of London.


Customer Reviews

Bad News2
This books is bad news, especially since it should have been such good news. Science fiction is in need of a good historical survey, but this isn't it. The writing is choppy and labored. The author endlessly uses phrases close to "this x reflects science fiction's central dialectic," but in neither the preface nor the postscript does he do an adequate job of explaining this dialectic. At times, the factors in contradiction within the dialectic seem to be as simple as the tension between technology and mysticism. At other times, Roberts has a more complex theory involving the interplay between Catholicism and Protestantism, which, believe me, don't ask. The narrative aspect of the history is awkward and lacks flow. The only primary sources used in the text is the science fiction itself; the author has apparently visited no archives. The bulk of the book is taken up by plot summaries. This is a synthetic history, and barely professional.

At several points, the author fails to cite the sources that guide his thinking. For instance, from 297-299, Roberts discusses how Thomas Pynchon's _Gravity's Rainbow_ lost out on the Nebula Award to Arthur C. Clarke's _Rendezvous with Rama_, but he never cites Jonathan Lethem's essay "The Squandered Promise of Science Fiction," which appeared in the _Voice Literary Supplement_ in 1998, nor does he cite Lethem's later exchange with Ray Davis, which appeared in the _New York Review of Science Fiction_. Yet, these pieces are obviously the origin of the Pynchon-Clarke comparison. Robert's work isn't plagiarism, but it comes damn close at times. It certainly isn't careful scholarship.

Finally, anyone who is well-read in the secondary literature on science fiction, including Darko Suvin, James Blish's work as William Atheling, and Thomas M. Disch's reminiscent _The Dreams Our Stuff is Made Of_ , will find that Roberts has virtually no new insights into the genre.

I will probably use this book as an occasional reference work because it is comprehensive. This comprehensivity, however, and its too long time span (400 AD-present? why?) makes the work thin. It's a lemon, folks.

An excellent reference volume as well as an introduction5
I've already been familiar with Robert's previous book on SF (an introduction to the genre published in 2000), so when I found out he's written a survey of the history of the genre, I was at once interested. Having read most of it (I skipped the early history), I've found it fully satisfactory. It's very readable, at once academic and entertaining, with brilliant occasional flashes of ironic British humour (e.g. when he expresses his disgust with the cheesy Ewoks of the Return of the Jedi - we're in full agreement there). He clearly has a concept to follow, a kind of personal view on the development of the genre, which is not too idiosyncratic but still contains a healthy dose of subjective opinions. On the other hand, he is very generous about most authors, not playing a game of eulogizing some and denigrating others. His tastes seem to be quite close to me, accidentally - I was often nodding enthusiastically while reading his comments.

While being an excellent survey of the history and also an introduction to the genre, it can also be used as a reference if someone wants to find new and interesting authors to read. Roberts has read a truly astonishing amount of SF, including non-English works (although his most obvious weakness is in that area; for instance, even though he praises Stanislaw Lem as the greatest European SF author of the late 20th century, I suspect he's never read anything by him except Solaris, which is a big miss), and he gives more than a laundry list of titles, making his preferences and recommendations clear.

All in all, a book well worth its price!

Fascinating Insights into Sci-Fi as Literary Genre4
This study of the history of Science Fiction traces the roots of Sci-Fi back to the extraordinary voyages of ancient Greece, such as the Odyssey as a prototype for travels to the Moon and beyond. The volume is fact filled and contains lots of historical insights that relate popular sci-fi works to the historical events of the time of their writing.

My only complaint is that writing is academic in style. The vocabulary gets a bit ponderous at times. It is not a particularly easy read. Yet the information makes it worthwhile to wade through the heavy verbage.