file:///J|/Peter%20F.%20Hamilton,%20Baxter,%20McAuley%20&%20McDonald%20-%20Futures.txt
formative experience by commissioning an Introduction from Patrick for Mars Probes, an anthology of
new stories about our closest x planetary neighbor to be published in the US in late 2001- it's always
nice to square the books and repay your dues, no matter how long it takes.
Anyway, back in the 1950s and hungry for more science fictional inspiration, I haunted the bookshops
and quickly discovered Angus McVicar's Lost Planet series, featuring young Jeremy Grant, and E. C.
Eliott's tales of Kemlo and his friends on Satellite Belt K. And then on to H. G. Wells's The War of the
Worlds-which I had already read as a Classics Illustrated and so knew the story-and Edgar Rice Bur-
roughs's Princess of Mars and its many sequels.
After that, courtesy of my English Language tutor at Leeds Grammar School, came Ray Bradbury's The
Illustrated Man ... in which "Kaleidoscope", a one-act tale of a doomed astronaut adrift in the void,
brought the concept of space travel firmly into the realms of the possible-even the probable-and,
paradoxically, its downbeat finale made the prospect of such adventure even more attractive than the ray-
gun variety of SF favored by the comic books and the once-so-called "juvenile" adventures.
From then I was firmly hooked.
As I grew older and more adventurous and demanding in my reading, the emphasis on space gave way
to terra firma tales set sometimes in possible futures, sometimes in the present and occasionally on an
alternate version of Earth on which accepted historical facts and events had been altered ... sometimes
subtly and sometimes not. Thus it was that the science-or simply the developmental and speculative
possibilities inherent in this brave and frequently audacious brand of literature-wove its spell.
Now I can enjoy the so-called hard science (quite an achievement for someone who regularly marvels at
both car and computer-and even, when the muse hides for a while, my desk lamp-when they obligingly
respond to the flicking of a switch) just as much as the space opera of, say, E. E. Smith's Lensman books
and old issues of Amazing and Fantastic.
All of these still grace my crowded bookshelves, though old faithfuls such as some of the ones I've
already mentioned and the likes of Carey Rockwell's adventures of Tom Corbett, Space Cadet are
(despite, in the latter, the exemplary technical assistance of Willey Ley) a little more mannered today
than they seemed to be all those years ago. But mannered or not, they all make up a glorious confusion
of adventures and stories set both on Earth and on worlds near and far, and in strange futures ... realities
populated by fantastic creatures and barely recognizable versions of ourselves. And every single word
on every page continues to fight the good fight and carry forward the baton of imaginative fiction.
The quartet of novellas in Futures, the second in what will be a continuing series of the very best in long
short fiction, comes from four writers working at the forefront of British science fiction ... four writers
who have carried that baton of imagination with tremendous vigor.
There are echoes of many of the authors I've already mentioned -and a whole lot more-in these four
great works.
I could say that, for me at least, lan McDonald's latest tale of the rampaging alien infestation known as
the Chaga and, specifically, of its effects on the life of a young East African girl, calls to mind much of
J. G. Ballard's work circa The Drowned World; that Stephen Baxter's consideration of godhood and
immortality on one of Saturn's moons in the sixth millennium seems a touch reminiscent of Arthur C. xii
Clarke's almost mystical parables of Mankind's true destiny set against a backdrop of supposed future
Utopias; that Peter F. Hamilton's centuries-long murder investigation conducted, as forensic science
develops, by descendants of the Roman Empire on an alternate Earth, carries the feel of both Agatha
Christie's Hercule Poirot tales and the Gil Hamilton stories of Larry Niven; and that Paul McAuley's
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