| From the End of the Twentieth Century | |||||||||||
| John M. Ford | |||||||||||
| NESFA Press, 313 pages | |||||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
John Ford is your close companion, and you may never have even heard of him. That's all
right -- he's been patiently waiting for you to discover him. And, he knows he is worth the wait.
From the End of the Twentieth Century is the product of the 1997 Boskone, where the New
England Science Fiction Association was fortunate enough to have Ford as their Guest of Honour. This
strange and wonderful collection is a cross-section of the considerable talents of the man.
The pieces stretch over a 20-year time span, covering essays, poems, short fiction, a game
scenario, and even a hauntingly elegant song (call it the love theme from How Much For Just The Planet?).
Travel figures into a large part of Ford's work -- some of it train travel, some of it time travel,
and some of it between realities. One thing all these travelling stories share is the promise at the end of
the trail of a destiny unanticipated. And, yes, sometimes at that trail's end is death, but more often it
is just another trail. Witness the stalwarts on the road to "Mandalay." Climb up into the cab of old
steam engines and spend the lonely nights "Riding the Hammer" with Copper. Make the heart-wrenching
decision of a lifetime to venture between the stars on the good ship Myrddin.
And follow Ford down whichever path he takes, because he has a way with laughter, and anger,
and sorrow. He touches upon an astronomer's ultimate personal loss in "The Dark Companion," and you
know that he could show you the exceptional tragedy and the greatest joy of every person who walked through his imagination.
So, though, could Alternities Corporation which exists to make those very moments a
reality. When, that is, everything's working properly. Even then, it isn't a dream come true for the
staff of Alternities Corporation; people only have so much imagination and so many dreams -- then it all becomes an endless loop.
Or, maybe it will all work out all right when Ford finishes the Alternities story and shows the
last pieces of the puzzle. For that, we'll have to wait and see.
Fiction, non-fiction, poetry and prose -- Ford turns his deft touch to all of them. And the
results are a wide range that you should explore. Besides, like "Amy, at the Bottom of the
Stairs," you may have no choice, no choice in the matter at all.
Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. She co-authored the 45th anniversary issue cover of MAD Magazine. Previews of her latest, as yet unpublished, novel are available at Hades Online. |
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