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Sailing to Utopia por Michael Moorcock
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Sailing to Utopia (edición 2000)

por Michael Moorcock (Autor)

Series: Sailing to Utopia (1-4)

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2394112,345 (3.44)1
You are a psion. You are the future of humanity, and to save Earth from doom, you must bend the laws of nature to your whim. You Are the Weapon, the first science-fiction release for Trinity, pits psion against Aberrant and psion against psion on the face of 22nd-century Earth and in the cold depths of space. You Are the Weapon, a collection of stories by award-winning science-fiction authors, newcomers and the game's creators, reveals secrets about the Trinity Universe told nowhere else.… (más)
Miembro:aethercowboy
Título:Sailing to Utopia
Autores:Michael Moorcock (Autor)
Información:White Wolf (2000), Paperback, 400 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca, GT3, Have read, Favoritos (inactive), Met author (inactive), 2009 (inactive)
Valoración:*****
Etiquetas:American, anthology, collection, fantasy, fiction, literature, omnibus, prose, science fiction, short story, speculative fiction, c:5B8653A2

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Sailing to Utopia por Michael Moorcock

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My reactions to reading this omnibus in 1999. Spoilers follow.

“Introduction” -- Short introduction in which Moorcock explains how the novels of this omnibus are collaborations in one way or another. The omnibus is dedicated to Robert Sheckley along with Philip K. Dick and Alfred Bester. Given Moorcock’s reputation of being an experimental writer in the style of the mainstream and his leadership in the “New Wave” movement of sf via his editorship of New Worlds, I was surprised to hear him chastise the “Angry Young Men” (I’m not sure what writers that refers to) as being concerned with little more than sex and power and corrupting “the tone and aspirations” of the modern novel. It was in Sheckley, Dick, and Bester that Moorock found the “substance” Victorian novels taught him to demand, and their work had more relevance, craft, energy, relevance, and imagination in Moorcock’s mind than many celebrated literary figures producing novels

The Ice Schooner -- Unlike his fantasies which usually seem to fit clearly in the themes of the Eternal Champion, this early sf novel of Moorcock’s doesn’t seem to be part of the same series. However, in thinking about it, it has some of the same ideas. Arflane, the hero here, worships (as does the epitome of the Eternal Champion, Elric of Melniboné) a form of chaos, specifically the entropy symbolized by the religion of the Ice Mother. Like most Eternal Champions, he is doomed to not have domestic or romantic happiness. At novel’s end, he leaves New York to go north to find evidence of the Ice Mother. However, he leads love Ulrica Ulseen to New York where her suspicions about the fading Ice Age are confirmed. Her trip back to the Eight Cities to get them ready for the changing climate fits in with the notion of the Cosmic Balance constantly shifting due to changing circumstance. The adherents of the Ice Mother, especially the fanatically murderous harpooner Urquart, are devotees of an unchanging descent into entropy. It's sort of a combination of Law and Chaos in a static culture – Urquart hates what he perceives as decadence in the Eight Cities subconscious reaction to a warming climate, and Arflare initially shares these feelings. Arflare helps, indirectly, to bring about a new Cosmic Balance. I’m a sucker for stories set in polar regions and during Ice Ages, and I liked this baroque tale of iceships though I thought the land whales a bit silly though they were rationalized as engineered creatures. I liked the northern polar settlements went underground (or, at least, under ice) and used science to survive. The Antarctic derived culture chose a more primitive static method. I liked the love affair between Ulrica and Arflare and the guilty conscience and miserableness from its adulterous origins. Though, like many fictional romances, its origins seemed implausibly sudden.

The Black Corridor -- This novel reminded me of the work of Philip K. Dick, particularly his Maze of Death (madness aboard a spaceship) and Clans of the Alphane Moon (which depicts society-wide madness – in the Morcock novel fin-de-siecle madness is rampant in paranoia and agoraphobia). It also was like a Dick novel in its weak ending. Here I’m not quite sure whether the protagonist Ryan killed all his fellow travelers before putting them in cryonic suspension tanks or not. Despite the weak ending, I found the novel involving while I read it. I liked the various manifestations of millennial madness: the vicious anti-woman gangs, the increasing nationalism and xenophobic (including a mass movement convinced aliens walk among us, subverting our society) populace. Ryan’s rationalizations of his ever increasing ruthlessness (he abandons a treasured co-worker for being Welsh, kills an adulterous lover, and hijacks a spaceship) were chilling as were asides about his mother being fatally caught up in a eugenics movement, descriptions of concentration camps, and civil war in Britain. Another influence (also mentioned in the omnibus’ introduction) is Alfred Bester, specifically his typography elements. These are pretty gratuitous and unnecessary here. (You could argue that, apart from The Demolished Man, they are also largely unnecessary in Bester’s novels too.)

The Distant Suns -- This novel was definitely lesser Moorcock, boring, muddled in construction (many unnecessary jumps to Erath awaiting the return of The Hope of Man and a vague rationale how ancient Asians ended up in the planetary system of Alpha Centauri and why the developed the way they did (mentioned as “slow decay”), and predictable with bits of H. G. Wells (the cultural and physical differentiation of Beya’s transplanted Earthlings ala the explicitly alluded to H. G. Wells' novel The Time Machine) and Edgar Rice Burroughs (transported Earthman amongst alien, but very human like, barbarians – a subgenre that never interested me much.

“Flux” - A tale of time travel through Chaos. Traveler Max von Bek learns that time has no pattern, no linearity, that he can give chaos shape (thus making him another incarnation of the Eternal Champion who fights chaos). I suppose the “golden chalice” he forms out of matter, the object that helps him realize his power, is an oblique reference to the Holy Grail which the von Bek power family is frequently connected to. The short story is marred by the vaguely described troubles of the “European Community” (I wonder when this story was written), metaphorically described as “compression”.) There were a couple of interesting elements: the disastrous social experiments (engineered sexual segregation which evolves to a nasty, literal war of the sexes and another experiment where three-quarters of the population spends intervals in cryonic suspension) and the emergence of mineral intelligence. What I found most amusing (given Moorcock’s liberal political leanings) is the realization of Max von Bek that the future can not be planned by governments since this seems a major assumption of people of Moorcock’s “progressive” politics. Of course, Moorcock undercuts his point by giving von Bek the magical power of divinely ordering the world well – a definite statement of the progressive sort. ( )
  RandyStafford | Oct 5, 2013 |
Contains three books about journeys: The Ice Schooner, The Black Corridor, and the Distant Suns, as well as a short story Flux. Some I had read before. The Black Corridor was haunting. The others were more pulpish in nature. ( )
  stuart10er | Sep 27, 2013 |
Sailing to Utopia is the eighth volume of the Eternal Champion omnibus. Michael Moorcock brings us four stories, all dealing in some way with a sailing to a utopia.

The first story sends Konrad Arflane on a journey to New York aboard an ice schooner, that is, a boat that skis across the ice that covers the planet. His hope is to find the Ice Mother, and to ask her why things are getting warmer.

The second story sends Mr. Ryan through deep space. He is the only one awake among his family and friends, and he must pilot the ship from the overcrowded Earth to a new world. He grapples with his sanity while he chats with his only friend: the ship's computer.

In the third story, Jerry Cornelius and his wife and friend, are on a reconnaissance mission to seek out new habitable worlds. The world they find, though, is already inhabited by an all-too-human race in a constant battle between the technocrats and the luddites. Oh, and one of the ship's party members goes crazy.

The fourth and final tale is a short story sending Max von Bek ten years into the future to get a grasp on the state of affairs and bring that knowledge back to the present. Unfortunately, his time machine only seems capable of traveling forward unto the end of time.

This is a nice collection of some of Moorcock's sci-fi tales. It is not as heavy with the Multiverse aspect as some of the books, but is united by the theme of travelers seeking a place (or time) of Utopian ideals.

This is definitely recommended for any fan of Moorcock, as well as fans of early sci-fi. ( )
  aethercowboy | Jan 30, 2009 |
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You are a psion. You are the future of humanity, and to save Earth from doom, you must bend the laws of nature to your whim. You Are the Weapon, the first science-fiction release for Trinity, pits psion against Aberrant and psion against psion on the face of 22nd-century Earth and in the cold depths of space. You Are the Weapon, a collection of stories by award-winning science-fiction authors, newcomers and the game's creators, reveals secrets about the Trinity Universe told nowhere else.

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