In the Upper Room and Other Likely Stories is the new collection of sixteen fantastic, ironic tales by Terry Bisson. Terry Bisson uses the fantastic genres as do Kurt Vonnegut or Harlan Ellison, and like them, he is one of the strikingly original voices in short fiction today, with an audience that transcends genre. "Particularly delightful," said The Christian Science Monitor of his first collection. Bisson writes entertaining and moving stories in a strong and unique voice. They are sharp, witty, subversive, and stylish. For
An Office a story of the private lives of icons on a computer desktop.
First a scientist discovers a way to date burning flame's and tries it on one in an ancient temple, with astonishing results.
clones of murderous criminals, with no human rights, are sent to be the property of their victims' families.
From the author of "Bears Discover Fire," one of the most anthologized American short stories of the last decade, this is a collection of stories that originally appeared in sources as diverse as Asimov's SF, Playboy, Southern Exposure , and Crank! They are clever, slick, memorable, occasionally profound, and always surprising.
Terry Ballantine Bisson was an American science fiction and fantasy author best known for his short stories, including "Bears Discover Fire" (1990), which which won both the Hugo and Nebula awards, as well as They're Made Out of Meat (1991), which has been adapted for video often.
A ver, es complicado recomendar este libro de relatos. Aunque antes de que sigáis leyendo la reseña quiero decir que para mí en general tiene 4 estrellas **** y que hay muchos relatos muy buenos que se merecen sus 5 estrellas ***** particulares. Coincido en general con la reseña de C aunque creo que soy más benévolo que ellos. Lo mismo ocurre con la opiniones de Literatura Fantástica. Por otro lado, hay muchos cuentos escritos para la revista Playboy con un tono subido y en general bastante machista, aunque se podría entender que hay cierta ironía e indirectamente se está riendo de ellos. Lo bueno de tener una edición papel y que esté documentada es saber el contexto en el que se publicó cada relato. Incluye: "Cuando los osos descubrieron el fuego" es un cuento más weird que CF que lo ganó todo en su época y que a mí me dejó impresionado cuando lo leí por primera vez. Lo releo ahora y me gusta aún más. 5 estrellas *****
"Palabra de boy scout" este es otro que ya había leído y que me encantó en su momento y me sigue maravillando. 5 estrellas *****
"Son todo carne" cuento corto más o menos divertido que juega con la gracia de lo diferente que podrían ser los extraterrestres que nos visitaran. Curioso 3 estrellas ***
"Dos chicos del futuro" uno de viajes en el tiempo con su paradoja y su humor muy entretenido. 4 estrellas ****
"Canción auténtica de la antigua Tierra" un ejercicio de nostalgia que me ha recordado una de las historias de visitas de robots que aparecía en la serie de Netflix: Dead, Love & Robots. No es gran cosa, es como una postal del futuro. 2 estrellas **
"En la última estancia" este es uno de los ejemplos perfectos de historia subida de tono para Playboy, es curiosa y tiene su gracia, muy en la línea de los viajes mentales de Desafío Total. OJO a que para sacarte de la simulación te llaman por teléfono en una historia del año 1996 adelantándose a The Matrix que usaba eso en 1999. Es mejor de lo que parece. 4 estrellas ****
"No hay muertos" Esta aparente historia sin sentido encierra una paradoja de la vida y de la niñez. Yo la disfruté mucho. 4 estrellas ****
"El show de Joe" Otra historia caliente para Playboy con humor y mucho absurdo pero que es de las más prescindibles para mi gusto. 1 estrella *
"macs" sobre alternativas a la venganza y la condena para asesinos. Es más una historia de terror que CF y que te deja con mal cuerpo. 4 estrellas ****
"Dígales que la están jodiendo todos y que se vayan a la mierda" puede que tenga gracia o que bromee con algo que no entiendo pero no me ha gustado, no es malo pero no me convenció lo que quería contar. 2 estrellas **
"El músico" otro cuento que no entiendo. Lo siento pero se queda en 1 estrella *
"Amoríos de oficina" este dentro de lo surrealista me ha gustado bastante. Una historia de amor entre agentes informáticos dentro de una realidad aumentada. 5 estrellas *****
"10:07:24" otro más de tipo absurdo sin pies ni cabeza. 1 estrella *
"Necronautas" espectacular historia de viajes al borde de la muerte, miré la fecha por si era anterior a una película con un planteamiento similar pero vi que el relato es posterior. En cualquier caso es otro de los mejores relatos de esta recopilación. 5 estrellas *****
"El primer fuego" los personajes lo son todo en esta historia en torno al poder y los ricos todopoderosos o eso creen ellos. 4 estrellas ****
"El rodillo" un rodillo destruye la Tierra poco a poco y nadie hace nada. En realidad no pueden hacerlo. Triste y sorprendente metáfora. 3 estrellas ***
"Incidente en Oak Ridge" viajes en bucles en el tiempo un poco al estilo de la película Palm Springs. Muy bien planteado, me gustó. 4 estrellas ****
"La curva del muerto" este es de viaje a realidades paralelas es más interesante de lo que parece al principio. 4 estrellas ****
"Él quería a Lucy" una historia que podría haber inspirado a la película "Her" con su punto de humor y absurdo pero entretenida. 4 estrellas ****
"En esta Virginia, no" para cerrar un cuento weird en cierta forma emparentado con el primero pero más lúgubre y menos conseguido. 2 estrellas **
-Interés intermitente con mucho de las dos cosas.-
Género. Relatos.
Lo que nos cuenta. El libro Cuando los osos descubrieron el fuego (publicación original: contiene material de In the Upper Room and Other Likely Stories, 2000, pero también de Bears Discovery fire and Other Stories, 1993) es una recopilación de veinte relatos del autor, escritos entre 1990 y el 2004, que nos llevarán a conocer los métodos de datación de la antigüedad del fuego, una paradoja temporal en tiempos del Proyecto Manhattan, el análisis que hacen de nuestra especie unos alienígenas, una realidad virtual para adultos, compradores de arte que vienen del futuro, la Ley de la Conclusión, un mensaje alienígena, el viaje por los confines de la muerte y el descubrimiento del fuego por parte de los osos, claro, por citar algunas tramas de los relatos.
¿Quiere saber más de este libro, sin spoilers? Visite:
When I wrote this review, the posted e-book contained only one story, "macs." Obviously one of the Goodreads librarians made the (overzealous, in my opinion) decision that "macs" should only be considered as part of this collection. Of course, the story has appeared in other books as well, but the librarian decided for me which book I really meant. I am leaving my review up because I disagree with the librarian's decision.
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I didn't actually read this as an e-book but in a standard paper book.
"macs" is an extremely clever, funny, and well-written short story. It is also mean-spirited and somewhat exploitive. I loved it when I first read it, but the more I have thought about it, the more I have come to dislike it. Terry Bisson is an excellent writer and I suspect that his purpose in writing this story was less cynical than my interpretation, but nevertheless I can't like this.
As an aside, now that more than twenty years have gone by since the incident on which this story is based, would new young readers understand what this is about?
Maybe 3.75? There are some wonderful stories, especially the two linked longer ones, which have this whimsical tone and comic-ironic down-home diction and setting but also an oddly hard-sf core about time flow. The second is a very funny parody of NYC lit as well. A bunch of pocket-universe stories that generally find different angles of view so they don't feel like the same thing over and over, and one where the families of Oklahoma City victims each get a McVeigh clone to kill or torture, as they see fit--an idea that feels all too apropos to what a large swath of contemporary America seems to want to do to fellow Americans. Bisson's prose is frequently hilarious, with an understated wit packed into laconically funny sentences.
And then there are the sex stories, all of which ran in Playboy in the 90s. I don't know what to make of them. On the one hand, they feel like intentional parodies of consumerist sexuality, especially the one where the guy falls in love with, and has his life ruined by, a chat app that is executing his trades, selling lingerie, and later working for the MLA and selling cars. It's Her, basically, except more profane. But...wow, is there a lot of detailed description of lingerie, like really detailed, to the extent that feels like any attempt to turn this into satire feels like theorizing your way out of the obvious, like when Henry Louis Gates argued that 2 Live Crew was satirizing common stereotypes of Black-male lasciviousness. Or you could read their song lyrics and conclude that they were pretty much saying what they meant. Kind of feel the same way here: for all my attempts to think of these as parodies of...what the Playboy connoisseur in the 90s, whoever that was and whatever aesthetic the magazine aimed at, maybe assumed that dumb, less sophisticated men thought the internet was going to make possible in terms of satiating sexual fantasy, there's a lot of sexual fantasy going on, all of it involving willing, teasing women.
Given how consistently these stories overturn the expected narrative, I suppose I can grant more of the notion that Bisson means to subvert those masturbatory takes rather than, uh, gratify them. Our culture needed to regress for another 30 years before AI made vividly possible the fantasies of male dominance that he's mocking here. Have I argued myself into some Gates-like rationalization? Possibly, though I would venture that this is based on the bold take that Terry Bisson is a more complex literary theorist and student of narrative than Luther Campbell.
Bisson's "Bears Discover Fire" is one of my favorite short stories. This is a later (though still older) collection of his short stories. It's hard to categorize them - sci-fi, speculative, fantasy, quirky, things that don't really fit the menu Story Graph offers at the top. Some of these I really liked (in particular the 2 related stories "The Edge of the Universe" and "Get Me to the Church on Time" are highlights). Some didn't really move me as much, and possibly they suffered from the expectations I attached to Bears Discover Fire. I feel maybe I should go back and read the BDF short story collection again... or maybe one of his other books.
El libro tiene un relato que me ha encantado, macs. La forma de escribirlo me ha parecido original, el tema sorprendente y lo de que toda la trama se explique en la última palabra me ha parecido genial. En el resto la calidad me ha parecido baja, unos relatos no están mal, otros me han parecido regulares y algunos directamente no me han gustado nada.
there were some stories that I loved, but the misses stand out more to me. When they missed, man did they miss. Still, worth a look. I'd especially recommend it from someone who likes reading short stories a lot. I'm not much of a fan so I can't help the feeling that this wasn't meant for me.
Oh man, Terry Bisson, I loved When Bears Discover Fire, but the first story in this collection was... less than memorable? Clearly I'm not the target audience for that one.