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This volume collects three of Cordwainer Smith's finest tales:
"Scanners Live in Vain," "The Game of Rat and Dragon," and "Mark
Elf."
Cordwainer Smith was the pseudonym used by Paul Myron Anthony
Linebarger (1913-1966) for his science fiction works. Linebarger
was a noted East Asia scholar and expert in psychological
warfare.
Linebarger also employed the literary pseudonyms "Carmichael
Smith" (for his political thriller Atomsk), "Anthony Bearden" (for
his poetry) and "Felix C. Forrest" (for the novels Ria and
Carola).
"Scanners Live in Vain" was Linebarger's first published SF
story as an adult (his short story "War No. 81-Q," which he wrote
at age 15 was published in his high school magazine), and the first
appearance of the Cordwainer Smith pen name. It was written in
1945, and had been rejected by a number of magazines before its
acceptance and publication in Fantasy Book in 1950. It was in that
obscure magazine that it was noticed by SF writer Frederik Pohl
who, impressed with the story's powerful imagery and style,
subsequently re-published it in 1952 in the more widely read
anthology Beyond the End of Time.
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Norstrilia
Cordwainer Smith
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R649
R559
Discovery Miles 5 590
Save R90 (14%)
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Welcome to the strangest, most distinctive future ever imagined by
a science fiction writer. An interstellar empire ruled by the
mysterious Lords of the Instrumentality, whose access to the drug
stroon from the planet Norstrilia confers on them virtual
immortality. A world in which wealthy and leisured humanity is
served by the underpeople, genetically engineered animals turned
into the semblance of people. A world in which the great ships
which sail between the stars are eventually supplanted by the
mysterious, instantaneous technique of planoforming. A world of
wonder and myth, and extraordinary imagination.
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Norstrilia (Paperback)
Cordwainer Smith
1
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R305
R255
Discovery Miles 2 550
Save R50 (16%)
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Rod McBan 151st farms 'stroon', the immortality drug, and is the
last scion of one of the oldest and most honourable families on
Norstrilia, only source of stroon. But he's also a telepathic
cripple and faces the ever-present risk of being culled under the
government's draconian population laws. To protect himself, he uses
his not-strictly-legal computer to play the market and amass an
unimaginable fortune. But after he survives an assassination
attempt, McBan discovers that having enough money to literally buy
the Earth is no good if you're too dead to spend it . . .
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