Well, that's different...

Aug 07, 2011 22:57

I just scanned another disaster story, Robert Barr's "Within an Ace of the End of the World," which is an interesting precursor of Doyle's The Poison Belt but written in 1900 and with a less happy ending - sixteen survivors, 8 British men and 8 American women, who are the only ones to take the oncoming crisis seriously and survive in hermetically ( Read more... )

forgotten futures, scientific romance

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Comments 12

pauldrye August 7 2011, 22:01:12 UTC
Huh, Barr was a Canadian after a fashion -- educated at what is now Ryerson University here in Toronto.

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ffutures August 8 2011, 08:11:10 UTC
Yes, just read his biography. I've put a couple of his stories on line previously, and there's an article about wrestling (I think) on the FF CD-ROM.

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freifraufischer August 8 2011, 00:20:00 UTC
Looked up the story, interesting, kind of tempted to read it now. It reminds me of this (overdramatized but based on reality story) How a Biotech Company Almost Killed the World With Booze from his book about how Everything is going to kill everybody.

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ffutures August 8 2011, 08:00:50 UTC
If you'd like to take a look I'd be happy to send you the files - might be a couple of megabytes including the illos, I haven't actually worked out exact file size yet. I don't want to put it on line for the moment, because I will need to use a lot of space for the Army and Navy Store files and I don't want to come up short for other things.

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ffutures August 8 2011, 08:12:11 UTC
Forgot to say, that is a truly scary biotech story. What the hell were they thinking?

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pauldormer August 8 2011, 10:41:42 UTC
Predates The Purple Cloud, too, then.

I could imagine Alasdair Gray doing illuminations like that.

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ffutures August 8 2011, 18:35:14 UTC
Certainly. But most publishers want things done cheap, not right.

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pauldormer August 8 2011, 21:28:09 UTC
There was an article in The Independent today about Gray. (It's the thirtieth anniversary of the publication of Lanark.) It mentioned a book he promised his publishers in 1986. It came out last year.

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karohemd August 8 2011, 11:13:54 UTC
That's beautiful. One of the books from which my grandmother used to read to me had something similar. I can't remember what it was, possibly Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales?

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ffutures August 8 2011, 18:37:50 UTC
The artist was called H.Lanos, I've never seen any other work by him, but it's possible he illustrated your book. He seems to have illustrated When The Sleeper Awakes in 1928, can't find out anything else about him.

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ffutures August 8 2011, 18:40:59 UTC
Just found an article about the artist

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Lanos

No English version, and it doesn't really say much other than a list of books he illustrated.

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ffutures August 9 2011, 18:33:41 UTC
I've now learned he died in 1932, so it's legal for me to use his art.

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