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Synopsis
From the Land of Lilliput to Jupiter Magnified
In 2000, British author Adam Roberts published his first SF novel, Salt, to wide
acclaim. Locus magazine described Salt as "... in the same vein as Frank Herbert's
Dune." And in 2001, the beginning of a new millennium, Salt was
named a finalist for the prestigious Arthur C. Clarke Award for best science
fiction novel of the year.
Now, five SF novels later, Adam Roberts
presents us with Swiftly, his first short fiction collection. These
twelve handpicked tales – eight published here for the first time – showcase
Roberts's authorial expertise at interweaving world-building with style, tone,
and image. Roberts, whom award-winning author Jon Courtenay Grimwood calls "the
king of high concept," is the rare hard-sf writer who emphasizes character over
construct.
In "Swiftly", the title story to this collection, mid-1840s
Europe is at the height of its manufacturing prowess, due in large part to the
finely honed skills of the enslaved Lilliputian-like people. But the French Army
threatens the English shore, and one British citizen dares to assist the French
in order to free the enslaved. In the sequel story, which closes this
collection, "Eleanor" marries manufactury owner Jonathan Burton, only to observe
her husband's demise at the hands of his own Lilliputian workers.
To learn if she's been a good mother, a pregnant woman telephones her (unborn)
daughter sixteen years into the future in "The Time Telephone." (The telephone
call cost more than $15,000, and several hundred digits needed to be dialed!)
And when "Jupiter Magnified" fills the Earth's skies, scientists'
opinions on the cause of the phenomenon abound, ordinary citizens contemplate
the end of the world, and one man's personal relationships become
all-encompassing.
From the psychological collapse of a prominent
scientist ("Stationary Acceleration") to the impact of a secret military
experiment on its human host ("Blindness and Invisibility") to an ascent from
the levels of Hell ("Dantesque"), Swiftly transcends hard-sf as it conveys us to
the heights and depths of the human condition.
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