[Home Page][Index of Reviews][December 1997][April 1998]
|
ISFDB Content Listing |
Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine
January 1998
This month's issue of Asimov's features a personal
Reflections column by Robert Silverberg where he talks
about his 'hunt' to look at California's Gray Whales. The journey is
full of adventure and some seasickness.
Stories featured in this issue are:
- "Approaching Perimelasma" by Geoffrey A. Landis is an
amazing journey by a miniature machine (with a personality download)
down into one of the most forbidding places in the universe; a black
hole. The machine must attempt to enter a black hole (past its event
horizon) and emerge again. How it does it will twist your mind, in
more ways than one. I would love to show this story to a
astrophysicist to see if it can work as it shows a way to defeat the
black hole's event horizon and get information out past it.
- "Reflections on Life and Death" by Kristine Kathryn
Rusch takes a look at a daughter and her old mother. The daughter
must decide whether to put her mother in their small house or put her
in a home. But in this world, homes are few and may not treat their
patients the way we expect.
- "King Moron" by R. Neube is set in the future where the
Earth is radioactive after the last Great War. King Richard IV sits
on a throne in an orbiting station and must decide whether to act
against acts of atrocities being done.
- "Evolution in Guadalajara" by Kandis Elliot is a wild
romp through a future world where conservationist and developers fight
to preserve/develop the last remaining parts of nature. The wild part
in the story is the rate at which such battles can be won or
lost.
- "Taking Care of Daddy" by Brian C. Coad shows how a
daughter, in a world where animals are bred to provide organs for
humans, will do what it takes to ensure her father is well taken care
of.
- "Mother Death" by Robert Reed is another of his stories
set in a universe where some human families have been given god-like
powers to ensure peace in the galaxy. One family, the Chamberlins,
misused it to try to create a new universe, causing the core of the
Milky Way to explode. All but one Chamberlain, Ord, has been caught
and stripped of their power. This story follows Ord in his attempts
to find out from his sister, Alice, what he must do to ensure peace.
The ending is open and very dramatic.
[Home Page][Index of Reviews][December 1997][April 1998]
Copyright (C) 1997-2003 Soh Kam Yung
All Rights Reserved
Comments to author: firstspeaker.geo(at)yahoo.com
Generated: Thu, Apr 10, 2003