From rec.arts.sf.written Tue Apr 18 16:01:58 1995 Path: news.ifm.liu.se!liuida!sunic!sunic.sunet.se!mimuw.edu.pl!news.nask.org.pl!fuw.edu.pl!wariat.org!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!news.sprintlink.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!boulder!ucsub.Colorado.EDU!brock From: brock@ucsub.Colorado.EDU (Steve Brock) Newsgroups: rec.arts.books.reviews,rec.arts.books,alt.books.reviews,rec.arts.sf.written Subject: Review of Anatomy of Wonder (sf reference) Followup-To: rec.arts.books,rec.arts.sf.written Date: 14 Apr 1995 02:35:12 GMT Organization: University of Colorado, Boulder Lines: 28 Approved: brock@colorado.edu Message-ID: <3mkn10$sq4@CUBoulder.Colorado.EDU> NNTP-Posting-Host: ucsub.colorado.edu Xref: news.ifm.liu.se rec.arts.books.reviews:478 rec.arts.books:118130 alt.books.reviews:10652 rec.arts.sf.written:96092 ANATOMY OF WONDER: A CRITICAL GUIDE TO SCIENCE FICTION, FOURTH EDITION, edited by Neil Barron. R.R. Bowker, 121 Chanlon Rd., New Providence, NJ 07974, (800) 521-8110, (908) 665-6688 FAX. Three indexes, bibliographies, notes. 912 pp., $52.00. 0-8352-3288-3 Reviewed by Steve Brock To all those complainers who write to rec.arts.sf.written, moaning that they've real all the good stuff from the past and there's nothing being written today that's worth squat: take a look at the "Anatomy of Wonder." With commentary on four hundred years worth of books listed by time period (emergence, between the wars, etc.), as well as critiques of movies, television shows, magazines, comic books, and radio shows, it'll be a long time before you play a dirge for written science fiction. In between reading "The Man Who Rocked the Earth" by Arthur Cheyney Train and Robert Williams Wood (1915), John Shirley's "Heatseeker" (1989), or even Bruce Sterling's "Heavy Weather" (1994), you can also check out sections on sf poetry, sf for young adults, general reference works, history and criticism, sf author studies (no mention of the newsgroups alt.fan.robert-jordan and others), an essay on teaching sf, a list of sf conventions, organizations, and awards, and a catalog of sf collections in research libraries. Though the book guide leans toward later works and totally disregards the Internet, this is a handy, handsome sf handbook, essential for libraries and sf enthusiasts. Grade: B+.