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   Book Info

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Stars: Original Stories Based on the Songs of Janis Ian  
Author: Janis Ian (Editor)
ISBN: 0756402441
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
This dazzling, highly original anthology, ignited by the meeting of songwriter Ian and a host of SF writers affected by her music at the 2001 Worldcon, showcases 30 mostly superior stories, each based on one of her songs. Some contributors take Ian at her word that science fiction is "the jazz of prose," responding to many of society's sharpest wounds with bittersweet improvisatory descants, like Terry Bisson in "Come Dance with Me," David Gerrold in "Riding Janis" and Orson Scott Card in "Inventing Lovers on the Phone," tales that probe the angst of adolescence. Spider Robinson, in "You Don't Know My Heart," like Gerrold in "Riding Janis," deals with the societal rejection gays and lesbians often face; "Immortality," by Robert J. Sawyer, and "Society's Stepchild," by Susan R. Matthews, respond to Ian's poignant "Society's Child," a plea for genuine racial tolerance; Stephen Baxter's "All in a Blaze" and Nancy Kress's brilliant "EJ-ES" confront the pain of aging; and several alternative-world tales, especially Harry Turtledove's powerful "Joe Steele" and Howard Waldrop's "Calling Your Name," explore the entrapment of the individual by sociopolitical forces engendered by materialism. The entire anthology seems to vibrate with the death throes of one world passing away, while far stranger ones struggle to be born. Their commonality, Ian tells us in her introduction, is that "They have heart. They have life. They have truth." No artist-nor any reader-could ask for more. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
The undercurrent here is mutual admiration. Coeditor Ian, the socially conscious singer-songwriter whose greatest hit was the 1960s interracial dating anthem "Society's Child," is a longtime sf fan who, at Anne McCaffrey's urging, started attending the annual World Science Fiction Conference and met several of her literary heroes, many of whom liked her work as much as she did theirs. So coeditor Resnick proposed asking them to create stories inspired by Ian's songs. Some pretty big names responded, maybe not with their best-ever stories, but hardly with junk. Kage Baker's historical chiller, "Nightmare Mountain," would sit as honorably in Gathering the Bones (reviewed in this issue). David Gerrold's sketch of impending puberty in space, "Riding Janis," is also the premier hard-sf entry. Diane Duane's creepy essay in art criticism, "Hopper Painting," proves the most stylish contribution, but Howard Waldrop's golden oldies nightmare, "Calling Your Name," and Harry Turtledove's worst-case scenario for the American 1930s, "Joe Steele," are stylish, too, though very differently. Stars are supposed to entertain; here they live up to expectations. Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Publishers Weekly
No artist - nor any reader - could ask for more.

Book Description
Thirty original stories-each inspired by a Janis Ian song-from some of the biggest names in science fiction and fantasy, including: Tad Williams, Harry Turtledove, Orson Scott Card, Joe Haldeman, John Varley, Mercedes Lackey, Judith Tarr, Janis Ian, and others.




Stars: Original Stories Based on the Songs of Janis Ian

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Stars is a truly unique undertaking, and an intensely personal one as well. It was born at the 2001 World Science Fiction Convention, but it was a birth that might never have occurred if not for a series of fortuitous events. The first was Janis Ian's visit to her friend Anne McCaffrey. It was there that she heard about the existence of Worldcon, the annual science fiction convention at which authors, editors, artists, and dedicated readers gather every year. Anne insisted that Janis, an avid science fiction reader since the age of seven, had to attend a Worldcon. But it was not until Janis began an e-mail correspondence with Mike Resnick that Stars became as inevitable as the fact that the sun rises each morning. It was Mike who lured Janis to the 2001 convention, and Mike who began introducing her to many of the writers whose work she had adored for decades. When Janis discovered that these writers were as enamored of her music as she was of their writing, what could be more exciting a creative venture than to meld these two universes into one?

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

This dazzling, highly original anthology, ignited by the meeting of songwriter Ian and a host of SF writers affected by her music at the 2001 Worldcon, showcases 30 mostly superior stories, each based on one of her songs. Some contributors take Ian at her word that science fiction is "the jazz of prose," responding to many of society's sharpest wounds with bittersweet improvisatory descants, like Terry Bisson in "Come Dance with Me," David Gerrold in "Riding Janis" and Orson Scott Card in "Inventing Lovers on the Phone," tales that probe the angst of adolescence. Spider Robinson, in "You Don't Know My Heart," like Gerrold in "Riding Janis," deals with the societal rejection gays and lesbians often face; "Immortality," by Robert J. Sawyer, and "Society's Stepchild," by Susan R. Matthews, respond to Ian's poignant "Society's Child," a plea for genuine racial tolerance; Stephen Baxter's "All in a Blaze" and Nancy Kress's brilliant "EJ-ES" confront the pain of aging; and several alternative-world tales, especially Harry Turtledove's powerful "Joe Steele" and Howard Waldrop's "Calling Your Name," explore the entrapment of the individual by sociopolitical forces engendered by materialism. The entire anthology seems to vibrate with the death throes of one world passing away, while far stranger ones struggle to be born. Their commonality, Ian tells us in her introduction, is that "They have heart. They have life. They have truth." No artist-nor any reader-could ask for more. (Aug. 1) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

A Herald of Valdemar and her former lover risk their lives to save others in Mercedes Lackey's "On the Other Side," while in Tanith Lee's "Two Faces of Love," that greatest of emotions receives a surprising examination. These tales, together with 28 others (all original), pay tribute to one of contemporary music's most thoughtful songwriters. Based on songs by Janice Ian, these stories by the genre's elite encompass a range of styles, from dark fantasy to cyberfiction, with stops along the way for space adventure, high fantasy, and vampire tales. Contributors include Nancy Kress, Spider Robinson, Harry Turtledove, and others united in their admiration for Ian's lyrics. Most libraries will want to add this to their short story collections. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

     



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