Keeper of Dreams
Short Fiction
-
- 10,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
This huge collection of short stories by one of science fiction's most beloved and popular writers is sure to please his millions of fans. Keeper of Dreams contains 22 stories written since 1990.
From the opening science fiction tale, "The Elephants of Poznan," we see the hand of a master at work making a familiar idea new, strange, and wonderful. "Angles" takes a sideways look at alternate universes. "Geriatric Ward" is published here for the first time; it was originally written for the legendary Last Dangerous Visions.
Keeper of Dreams contains science fiction, fantasy, and several of Card's mainstream fiction works. Included are two tales from the Alvin Maker universe, "Grinning Man" and "The Yazoo Queen."
In addition to the stories, this book features new introductions by Orson Scott Card for each story, with commentary on his life and work. With the earlier Maps in a Mirror, this collection is a definitive retrospective of the short fiction career of the writer that the Houston Post called "the best writer science fiction has to offer."
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Multiple Hugo- and Nebula-winner Card offers short, revealing commentaries on these 22 compelling short stories, novelettes, and novellas, noting that short work has inspired some of his best and best-known long fiction. These short science fiction, fantasy and "literary" stories, along with a handful of Hatrack River tales (related to the Alvin Maker series) and four stories "written by a Mormon, about Mormon culture, for Mormon readers," illustrate Card's fascination with complex child protagonists, touchingly portrayed in "Inventing Lovers on the Phone"; absorption with moral dilemmas, wrapped up in family love and tensions in "Worthy to Be One of Us"; and new views of old traditions, familiar and discomfiting in "Homeless in Hell" and "Christmas at Helaman's House." Card intended several of the included stories, like the powerful "In the Dragon's House," to open novels not yet written, but even on their own they provide significant examples of his perennial themes: morality, salvation and redemption.