Reviews

North of Infinity II by Stephen Graham King, Mark Leslie

weaselweader's review

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4.0

Mind-bending Canadian sci-fi shorts!

Imagine a large pie, if you will, whose filling, pastry and sumptuous mouth-watering flaky crust represent the finest speculative fiction that Canada's authors have to offer. Suppose that this pie is cut into three generous pieces - one piece being horror, another fantasy and the third representing modern sci-fi in its many different styles and guises. NORTH OF INFINITY II, an anthology of 12 short stories edited by Mark Leslie and written by the very best that contemporary Canadian fiction in this genre has to offer is a fascinating three legged beast standing at the very centre of this pie with one foot firmly planted in each of its pieces.

Although this fabulous little collection can be read through the course of a single sitting in front of the fire, Leslie has collected lots of meat for a wondering reader to chew on - a scientist sends himself messages in his own past in order to alter his destiny; a deeper understanding of the functions of a brain; a somewhat horrific bizarre future for reproductive technology; an alternative paleontological history of the demise of the dinosaurs; an anthropological imagining on the discovery of fire; oft-repeated but always entertaining philosophical musings on the sentience of robotic intelligence; the nature of a society in which one can alter one's own personality for a fee; and, my personal favourite, a very disturbing story involving the ethics of capital punishment.

With the possible exception of Robert Sawyer, a winner of both the Hugo and Nebula awards in the sci-fi genre, these authors are, sadly, not well known names in literature. But, if this collection is a typical example of their output, then they certainly should be. Highly recommended for fans of sci-fi, particularly in the short story format.

Paul Weiss

apostrophen's review

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4.0

I have to admit to being a little surprised that an anthology of Canadian Science Fiction was so dark. It's not that I have anything against dystopia, but I was taken aback - surely the True North Strong and Free would have at least one glimmer of happiness? No? Oh. Okay then.

What this anthology does have, however, is some very high quality entries into short fiction.

Obviously, some names - Robert J. Sawyer - spring to the forefront of attention, and his story, "Forever," is both clever and quite moving.

"Walter's Brain," by Kimberley Footit, was absolutely charming, and made me smile throughout - one of the few science fiction stories I've read that gave me a sense of "feel-good."

The strongest of the set in my opinion was Stephen Graham King's "Pas de deux" which echoed with a grim realism and gave me a shiver-in-the-spine sensation with its closing moments.

While the tales were varied, and I'll admit to not "getting" one or two of them, as a collection, the anthology is definitely worthwhile. Kudos to Mark Leslie for gathering some Canadian talent and making a strong whole.
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