Ever wonder what really happens on the lower decks of the space ship or in the castle kitchen? This unique collection of original science fiction and fantasy short stories focuses on characters that are normally in the background and brings them to the forefront of the adventure! Low Port features stories by Mark Tiedemann, Laura J. Underwood, L. E. Modesitt, Jr., Nathan Archer, Jody Lynn Nye and many others, including a new urban fantasy by Sharon Lee! So come along and meet an orphan with a dream, a dockworker who believes in freedom, a maintenance worker with feelings and visit a soup kitchen with a secret.
For this unexpectedly rewarding SF/fantasy anthology, editors Lee and Miller (the Liaden Universe Adventures) take an offbeat if not especially compelling premise, focusing on writing that features characters who remain in the background of most fiction-street musicians, customs agents, bar owners, social workers, etc. The 20 contributors, mostly newcomers, all suggest that everyone is worth more than a fast glance and that everyone sometimes has a chance to make serious choices. Some preach sentimentally about these truths. But others offer memorable, thought-provoking stories, with settings ranging from alternate worlds (Laura J. Underwood's "The Gift") to urban homelessness (Ru Emerson's "Find a Pin"), from ancient Japan (Alan Smale's "Sailing to the Temple") to interstellar space (eluki bes shahar's "Riis Run"). There's a surprising amount of humor, and, nestled among usually upbeat tales, one lovely piece of blackhearted cynicism, Joe Murphy's "Zappa for Bardog." If the writers' names are largely unfamiliar, here's a good place to sample their work, to see what they can do when a fresh idea intrigues them. (Sept.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
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July 26, 2003: Unlike most science fiction anthologies that concentrate on superheroes or villains that seem worldly if not galactic in scope, this twenty stories collection concentrates on those individuals who will not have to deal with tax rebates or for most part taxes. The stars of these tales typically do not attain the bottom of the food chain though some are hard working blue-collar individuals needed but hidden so that Scotty can apply his magic to the warp drive. Life is more of a daily survival for these players whose dreams reach the loftiness of regular and recurring solid meals.
The tales grip the audience as it serves as a reminder that around the world including the United States there are those who don?t need to learn how to fish until sustenance is attained. The contributions are all well written with a few harrowing in their excellence as the audience will ponder where in our society lies those who reside in the LOW PORT.
Harriet Klausner