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The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume Six: Multiples

av Robert Silverberg

MedlemmarRecensionerPopularitetGenomsnittligt betygDiskussioner
561460,542 (4)Ingen/inga
For some people, one personality is just never enough. A story of duplicity from the Hugo and Nebula Award{u2013}winning author of Lord Valentine{u2019}s Castle . Slowly, a climate of acceptance has been growing for people with divided personalities, especially in big cities like San Francisco. There are clubs with mirrors and lights that help people to switch and double, maybe even triple. When, like Cleo, you feel your world has become stale and cramped, they{u2019}re the perfect place to meet someone. But first Cleo has to pretend that she{u2019}s a multiple, because they{u2019}re notoriously indifferent to singletons and their bland, overly simple selves. When she meets Van, she{u2019}s able to pull off her masquerade for a week of bliss with him (and Paul, and Hal, and . . .). Or so she thinks. When Cleo is caught in her lie, she attempts to bow out gracefully. But Van doesn{u2019}t want to lose her. In fact, he wants more of her. There could be a whole horde of selves inside of her--and he knows just how to get them out . . . In the thoughtful and emotionally evocative title story, {u2018}Multiples,{u2019} multiple personality {u2018}disorder{u2019} is normal, and indeed a desired state, creating an effective metaphor for the loneliness experienced by socially isolated individuals. -- SF Site Praise for Robert Silverberg and his short stories When Silverberg is at the top of his form, no one is better. --George R. R. Martin, #1 New York Times {u2013}bestselling author Decades after being originally published, most of these stories are still just as entertaining and powerful as they were when first released. A singularly unique collection. -- Kirkus Reviews.… (mer)
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ORIGINALLY POSTED AT Fantasy Literature.

I’m a fan of Silverberg’s stories, so I think this series is wonderful — it’s a sure way to get one copy of each of his most important stories in eight tidy volumes. Volume six, titled Multiples, contains fourteen stories and novellas published in the mid-1980s.

In a general introduction to Multiples, Silverberg talks about the state of the short story market in the mid 1980s — how most of the pulps had gone under and been replaced by original anthologies in the 1970s and then by slick magazines in the 1980s. The biggest and best-paying venues were Playboy and Omni, so several of the stories in this collection were first printed in those magazines.

Each story in Multiples also has its own introduction in which Silverberg talks about the writing and publication process of that particular piece and reports any awards or significant acknowledgments it received. For example, the first of these explains how the invention of word processing affected Silverberg’s writing process and how nice it was to not have to re-type all the drafts he had to produce to satisfy Alice K. Turner, fiction editor for Playboy. (By the way, after reading Multiples, I have come to respect Ms. Turner’s literary taste, and next time some man tells me he reads Playboy for the stories, I will believe him!)

Here are the stories in Multiples:

* “Tourist Trade” — (1983, Playboy) Eitel is an art dealer who is selling a Renaissance painting to collectors from Centauras. His price was four million, but he offers a special deal when he sees the lady Centauran.
* “Multiples” — (1983, Omni) A scary but fascinating look at Multiple Personality Disorder. Multiple Personality Disorder is a controversial diagnosis, but after reading “Multiples” you won’t think about it the same way again.
* “Against Babylon” — (1986, Omni) Aliens visit and inadvertently set fire to Los Angeles. As explained in his introduction, this story highlights Robert Silverberg’s love/hate relationship with L.A.
* “Symbiont” — (1985, Playboy) The fascinating idea for this story was supplied by a woman whom Silverberg met on a speaking tour. He wrote the story and married her. This is an excellent almost-horror story about cowardice and mercy.
* “Sailing to Byzantium” — (1985, Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine). I was delighted that this popular novella was included in the collection! “Sailing to Byzantium” won the Nebula Award in 1986 and earned second place for the Hugo that year. It’s about a future 50th century youthful alien culture which enjoys temporarily recreating and touring ancient Earth cities. For some reason, they enjoy pulling a few human visitors out of time to share their creations with them. This story makes us think about aging and consider what it means to be human.
* “Sunrise on Pluto” — (1985, The Planets) The first explorers on Pluto find a life form. Or is a machine? How do we know the difference?
* “Hardware” — (1985, Omni) The theme of “Hardware” is very similar to the previous story’s theme. Scientists from Earth discover a computer embedded in an asteroid. When they bring it back to the lab, it begins to rally the computers on Earth. Very funny, but frightening, too.
* “Hannibal’s Elephants” — (1988, Omni) This humorous story is about aliens landing in Central Park.
* “Blindsight” — (1986, Playboy) A twist on the familiar revenge story.
* “Gilgamesh in the Outback” — (1986, Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine) This Hugo-winning novella is an afterlife fantasy in the style of Philip Jose Farmer’s Riverworld and John Kendrick Bangs’ Houseboat on the Styx. In Silverberg’s version, Robert E. Howard and H.P. Lovecraft meet Gilgamesh in Hell. When Howard sees Gilgamesh, he thinks he’s found Conan and he becomes disturbed by his feelings toward his hero. This novella is especially well-written, funny and, though I learned a bit about Robert E. Howard, not as teachy as Farmer’s and Bangs’ works tend to be.
* “The Pardoner’s Tale” — (1987, Playboy) A fun and fast-moving cyberpunk story which was later used in Silverberg’s novel The Alien Years.
* “The Iron Star” — (1987, The Universe anthology) This story about the fear of first contact with an alien civilization felt like something Ray Bradbury would write, probably because it was so pessimistic. I liked it.
* “The Secret Sharer” — (1988, Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine) This beautiful and unsettling tribute to Joseph Conrad’s novella “The Secret Sharer” is about loneliness, companionship, the difference between mind and body, and the quiet beauty of space.
* “House of Bones” — (1988, Terry’s Universe) I never tire of stories about modern people going back to prehistoric times. This is a warm-hearted version published in a memorial anthology for editor Terry Carr.

Usually a story collection is a chancy thing unless it was compiled as a “best of” compendium. It’s remarkable, then, that I enjoyed every story in this collection. When I tried to narrow the list down to my favorites, it was hard to do, so I’ll pick the three that will stick with me the longest for different reasons: “Symbiont” (made me feel horror), “Sailing to Byzantium” (such a unique concept), and “Hardware” (just plain fun).

I highly recommend The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg Volume Six: Multiples 1983-1987 to all Silverberg fans and to any reader who’d like an excellent introduction to the work of this prolific Science Fiction Grand Master. I am looking forward to Volume Seven! ( )
1 rösta Kat_Hooper | Apr 6, 2014 |
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For some people, one personality is just never enough. A story of duplicity from the Hugo and Nebula Award{u2013}winning author of Lord Valentine{u2019}s Castle . Slowly, a climate of acceptance has been growing for people with divided personalities, especially in big cities like San Francisco. There are clubs with mirrors and lights that help people to switch and double, maybe even triple. When, like Cleo, you feel your world has become stale and cramped, they{u2019}re the perfect place to meet someone. But first Cleo has to pretend that she{u2019}s a multiple, because they{u2019}re notoriously indifferent to singletons and their bland, overly simple selves. When she meets Van, she{u2019}s able to pull off her masquerade for a week of bliss with him (and Paul, and Hal, and . . .). Or so she thinks. When Cleo is caught in her lie, she attempts to bow out gracefully. But Van doesn{u2019}t want to lose her. In fact, he wants more of her. There could be a whole horde of selves inside of her--and he knows just how to get them out . . . In the thoughtful and emotionally evocative title story, {u2018}Multiples,{u2019} multiple personality {u2018}disorder{u2019} is normal, and indeed a desired state, creating an effective metaphor for the loneliness experienced by socially isolated individuals. -- SF Site Praise for Robert Silverberg and his short stories When Silverberg is at the top of his form, no one is better. --George R. R. Martin, #1 New York Times {u2013}bestselling author Decades after being originally published, most of these stories are still just as entertaining and powerful as they were when first released. A singularly unique collection. -- Kirkus Reviews.

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