On Mar 14, 2:30=A0am, "Mike Stone" <mwst...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> "Mike Schilling" <mscottschill...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>
> news:HqmCj.3020$Rq1.496@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
>
>
> > Butch Malahide wrote:
> > > On Mar 13, 6:45 pm, lal_truckee <lal_truc...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> > >> Butch Malahide wrote:
>
> > >>> Anderson again: Time Heals; The Man Who Came Early
>
> > >> I've never run across (or even heard of) "Time Heals" - is it
> > >> sufficiently different and sufficiently good to seek it out? I'm
> > >> quite fond of "The Man Who Came Early."
>
> > > To praise it with faint damns, it's not as good as "The Man Who Came
> > > Early". Like TMWCE, it's the tragedy of a man displaced in time,
> > > trapped in a society that has no use for him. Unlike TMWCE, he goes
> > > into the future, and his time-travel is deliberate: dying of cancer,
> > > he has himself put in stasis to await a cure. He is quite optimistic
> > > about his prospects of making a life for himself in the future; if
> > > you
> > > like surprises, I've already spoiled it by telling you it doesn't
> > > work
> > > out that way.
>
> > Wow, it's a downbeat Anderson story? =A0 If you say so.
>
> Poul wrote quite a few downbeat stories. Just off the top of my head, I
> recall "Murphy's Hall", "The Pugilist", "Windmill", "The Disinherited"
(ak=
a
> "Home") "Goat Song", "Night Piece", "A Man To My Wounding", "For The
> Duration", "Details" and the novel _A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows_. FTM
> "The Man Who Came Early" could be considered
> downbeat.
>
> For some reason, he seems to have had a particularly "black" period
during=
> the 1970s. I'm not sure why. No doubt like most decades it had its
darker
> side, but I didn't thing it was _that_ bad.
>
> --
>
> Mike Stone - Peterborough, England
>
> Always drink upriver from the herd. (song title).- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Not as downbeat as Emily Bronte's masterpiece, or Nathaniel
Hawthorne's magnum opus, or those two short works (novellas?) for
children (!) by John Steinbeck, or-- Poul Anderson was never
depressing! Sickening, once (revised Broken Sword: the description of
the blood eagle); horrifying once (when Flandry observed the results
before ordering, "Turn it off"). Depressing, no.
Cece


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