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Laugh Lines

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

Space: The Funniest Frontier!

Ben Bova, SF master humorist You'd better believe it! A supersonic zeppelin. The "Crisis of the Month" Oz, revealed. A foray into a future where publishing is literally cut-throat. A raucous horde of hard SF legend Ben Bova's most amusing and imaginative novels and tales!

At the publisher's request, this title is sold without DRM (Digital Rights Management).

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 26, 2008
      Slapstick humor, mostly aimed at big business and the entertainment industry, fuels this mix of older works by veteran hard SF writer Bova (The Aftermath
      ). The collection opens with the 1975 novel The Starcrossed
      , about a television studio's bumbling attempts to rehash Romeo and Juliet
      with a space opera spin, showcasing Hollywood's uneasy three-way relationship between creativity, stroking egos and making money. The handful of short stories primarily use SF ideas to flavor humorous situations: “Crisis of the Month” reveals the truth behind the international crises that take over the news with clocklike regularity, while “The Great Moon Hoax, or A Princess of Mars” proposes an alternate history where Martians scuttle the American space program. The most successful piece, despite its awkward extrapolation, is the 1989 novel Cyberbooks
      , which skewers the publishing industry while envisioning the chaos that could ensue with the invention of “electrical books.”

    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 30, 2008
      Slapstick humor, mostly aimed at big business and the entertainment industry, fuels this mix of older works by veteran hard SF writer Bova (The Aftermath). The collection opens with the 1975 novel The Starcrossed, about a television studio's bumbling attempts to rehash Romeo and Juliet with a space opera spin, showcasing Hollywood's uneasy three-way relationship between creativity, stroking egos and making money. The handful of short stories primarily use SF ideas to flavor humorous situations: \x93Crisis of the Month\x94 reveals the truth behind the international crises that take over the news with clocklike regularity, while \x93The Great Moon Hoax, or A Princess of Mars\x94 proposes an alternate history where Martians scuttle the American space program. The most successful piece, despite its awkward extrapolation, is the 1989 novel Cyberbooks, which skewers the publishing industry while envisioning the chaos that could ensue with the invention of \x93electrical books.\x94

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  • English

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