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Cargando... Waterstone's Guide to Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horrorpor Paul Wake
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Science fiction has the lion’s share of pages, with sections on Hard Science Fiction (so-called because science and technology are the bedrock of this subdivision, not because the fiction is necessarily difficult to read) and Mainstream SF, along with Space Opera and Literary Science Fiction. About the halfway point the section on Humorous Science Fiction and Fantasy points to a blurring of the boundary between the two genres, leading naturally to Fantasy in all its other manifestations. Horror is accorded a mere tenth of the text before two further chapters — on SF in the media and graphic novels are briefly touched on.
Interspersed through these sections are brief essays by John Clute, Michael Marshall Smith, Stephen Baxter, Peter F Hamilton, Robert Rankin, Anne McCaffrey, Ramsey Campbell and Neil Gaiman — all big names in these fields, though I confess I’ve only read and heard of a couple of them. But at the heart of the book are the many entries, contributed by Waterstone’s staff, on individual authors. These range from the almost cryptic — Piers Anthony and Jean M Auel merit only two sentences each, for example — to the detailed — such as those on Ray Bradbury, Philip K Dick and, of course, Tolkien. Most are established authors, several were up and coming and a few, I fear, may have never really arrived.
Does the guide succeed in what it set out to do? Yes, I believe it does. Following some recommendations I’ve been persuaded to try, or even rediscover, some authors which I might have passed on, from Doris Lessing to David Eddings and from Frank Herbert to Poul Anderson. And the list goes ever on; perhaps I don’t need Waterstones to provide an updated edition yet. ( )