14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Awesome sword-swingin' and super-sneakin' adventure on a mad, mad Mars that could never be, May 26, 2008
This review is from: The Secret Of Sinharat (Planet Stories Library) (Paperback)
Leigh Brackett was an extremely influential American author who wrote and won major awards in a number of genres, including western and noir. She is best remembered, however, for her TOWERING contribution to fantastic fiction (a term I prefer to use because it's often very difficult to draw a hard line between sci-fi and fantasy), particularly during the 1940s and '50s. Most of her fan-fi can be classified as planetary romance: a sub-genre pioneered in the early 20th century by Edgar Rice Burroughs and which characteristically involves travel to, and adventure on, fanciful planets where savagery and sword-play carry the day rather than radium and ray guns. Though countless planetary romances ranging from dreckish to dazzling have fluttered off the printing presses since Burroughs' classic Barsoom series, Brackett's are some of the absolute TOPS, and the milieu in which they take place is unforgettable: Earthlings have long possessed the secret of interplanetary space travel and have been very, very busy lording it over the rest of the solar system, almost every planet of which is home to its own human race(s) (generally the dominant inhabitants prior to the advent of spacefaring Earth) and most planets of which have one or more unique "halfling" races: half-animal or half-insect-seeming humanoids who are typically equal to homo sapiens in intelligence. Whether directly concerned or looming in the background, colonial Earth's rocky (and often exploitive) relationship with its extra-terrestrial subjects almost always plays some part in these stories, which are typically fast, wild and tinged with a tingly touch of shady-alley noir.
This slick and affordable edition, courtesy of Paizo Publishing's "Planet Stories" line, contains two wonderful Brackettales: THE SECRET OF SINHARAT and THE PEOPLE OF THE TALISMAN. They both take place on Mars: a dying world where savage tribes vie with sword and axe for what few resources remain, and in which a few relatively civilized settlements, fearful of the wild hordes, huddle behind either the colonial government or the chance protections of geography. They both also star Eric John Stark the mercenary, Brackett's most famous hero. Stark, raised by Mercurian halflings and colored black by the sun and atmosphere of that world, is sort of an amalgam of James Bond (the itchy, watchful, but occasionally careless Bond of the original Fleming novels, not the unflappably icy fellow in the boring movies) and Conan the Barbarian. Though Stark's services are often purchased by the indigenous tribes of Mars (he would never fight for the colonial government), he often undertakes deadly missions simply to honor those to whom he is bound by friendship, and that is how both of these terrific stories -- one taking place on the floor of an aeons-dead sea and the other on Mars' snow and ice-choked northern cap -- begin. Oh, but don't be expecting any Martian halflings; they're all dead by this time! To see what Brackett's red planet was like in its hey-day, halflings and oceans and green fields and all, you'll have to read THE SWORD OF RHIANNON, another short novel that may be reprinted by Paizo in the future.
Before I go, let me say that I really like these Paizo volumes; the covers are really nice and thick and are pre-creased next to the spine to prevent curling. If this attractive little edition gets you hungry for more Brackett, you will be happy to hear that Paizo plans to print a lot more of her stuff in the future and also that Haffner Press already has two BIG and BEAUTIFUL hardcover collections of her short stories for sale:
Martian Quest: The Early Brackett and
Lorelei of the Red Mist: Planetary Romances. They are fiiiiine, baby, real fiiiiine!
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
hard-boiled planetary adventure, January 14, 2008
This review is from: The Secret Of Sinharat (Planet Stories Library) (Paperback)
Paizo's Planet Stories line is bringing back into print some classics of the pulp medium/genre. These two stories from Leigh Brackett are perfect exemplars of why this is a great idea. Brackett is little known today (except perhaps for her scriptwriting credit on The Empire Strikes Back) but this volume displays her talents--hard-boiled diction and style combined with Burroughs-derived planetary romance.
The setting is the unscientific classic pulp solar system--essentially the exotic ports of call of the early twentieh century writ large. Mars is decadent and subversive--like a colonial powers' view of China or the Middle East; Venus is primitve and restless--again echoing views of Africa, South America, or Oceania. Brackett's hero is Eric John Stark--earthman raised by savages on Mercury--who is half Tarzan and half Sam Spade.
The novellas here are two of her three Stark pulp stories (he later graduated into some interplanetary novels) and are fast-paced, tough-minded adventure at its best.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Barsoom gone bad or Mars from the gutter up., January 19, 2008
This review is from: The Secret Of Sinharat (Planet Stories Library) (Paperback)
Let me start off by saying that this is the first book review that i have ever written.. so cut me some slack! :-)
Paizo has taken a big chance here by attempting to introduce classic works of Adventure SF and Fantasy to a new/younger audience. And so far it seems to be paying off if the activity on the message boards is any indication.
I have a new subscription to the series and my first volume arrived today.
"The Secret of Sinharrat ( with "The People of the Talisman") is probably Leigh Brackett's most famous work or at least it features her most famous character "Eric John Stark".
This is the 3rd edition I own of the book. I first discovered LB waaaaay back in the early 70's when an older cousin of mine gave me a pile of the old "Ace Double" paperbacks. For those of you who don't remember them these were a very long running series of 241 Science Fiction/Fantasy paperback series from Ace Books from the 1950's up to the early 1970's.
The contents were usually one short novel from a famous writer and one short novel from a newer writer. The novelty was that the 2 novels were not printed one after the other. You would read one novel and then flip the book over (which made the back cover the front cover) and read the next novel. So these were paperbacks that 2 different "Front covers".
Anyways one of these caught my eye right off. On one side it showed a man dressed somewhat in barbarian fashion riding some sort of large reptile beast across a night time desert landscape while being pursued by other figures who were similarly mounted .
My 11 year old brain thought "Cool!".
As I started to read it I became very excited when I realized that this was two novels set on a Mars that was very similar to the Mars/Barsoom of Edgar Rice Burroughs.
But after reading a few pages of the first novel I became kind of confused. The good guy was actually sort of a bad guy who is forced / black mailed into helping the law stop a planned uprising of the locals.
Eric John Stark was the first Anti-hero I ever came into contact with. He lives in a universe where it seems that at least all of the inner planets of the Solar System are habitable.
You have to understand that even into the 1950's no one was 100% sure of the conditions that existed on the other planets. So the popular conceptions in the minds of many folks were
Mars is a dying desert world that is much older than ours.
Venus is a young dynamic tropical hothouse of a world that is younger than ours.
Mercury is hot as hell, doesn't rotate on its axis and is probably only liveable at the terminator existing between the day and night sides.
This is the universe that Eric John Stark was born into. He is a mixture between Tarzan and Clint Eastwood's "Man with no name".
Stark was born on mercury in a mining colony where his parents worked as geologists. They were killed in a landslide and he was adopted as a baby and raised by the mercurian aborigines who are/were more or less an art of Neanderthal and given the name "N'Chaka" which means "He with no Tribe"
When he was 12 years old his tribe gets wiped by Terran miners and he is caged and tormented by the men who murdered his people. He gets raised and civilized by an agent of this universes UN interplanetary police.
We have some serious Tarzan parallels going on here! :-)
He spends the large part of his adult life as a mercenary helping the natives of Mars and Venus in their attempts to throw off the yoke of Earth.
This is some serious stuff here! This is not Burroughs romanticized Mars with its noble warlike inhabitants who are taken as they are and seen from the perspective of their own cultures.
This is Mars from the gutter up that has been exploited and "colonialized" by the Earth (white folks that is.). Imagine Barsoom going straight to hell after the big earth corporations show up and exploit the hell out of the place, keeping down the natives and basically treating them as 3rd class nuisances! We don't see Mars from the eyes of its Ruling Class. We get a Mars from the perspective of its lower classes. These are people who are being screwed over by not just their own rulers but also the colonial powers from earth. LB's Martians are cut throats, thieves and whores who we see from the context of our culture and not theirs. This is a sad, worn out, angry, brutal and cynical Mars. It's not really a place you'd care to visit. And if you did bother to visit, the locals would cut your throat the first chance they got.
What is so great with Leigh Brackett is that her women are as tough as the men and maybe tougher.
If you have ever seen the old westerns by Howard Hawks; Rio Lobo, Rio Bravo and El Dorado starring John Wayne, you might have notice how tough and strong the female characters are. That's not just because Hawks loved tough "dames". Leigh Brackett was his favourite Screenwriter. She wrote the scripts to at least 4 Howard Hawks's films starring John Wayne.
So what we have here is "Film noir" Science Fiction. The good guys aren't really all that good. They are just good in comparison to the true villains.
Both novels included in this volume are 2 stark adventures the LB expanded to novel size. Both deal with Stark being forced into helping people against his own interests and better judgement. I won't give too much away aside from saying that these are very adult stories. When I say "adult" I mean "adult" in an emotional sense. These are stories full of wonder that are set a SF universe that is not wonderful. The "ERBzine" website has a great article on this subject. Check it out. It is called "Colonial Barsoom".
And did I mention that Eric John Stark is to my knowledge the first BLACK hero?
That's right, he black! He was burned black by the searing rays of the sun over Mercury.
In the "Secret of Sinharat" one of the villains even refers to him as a"black ape"!
And big Hats off to Paizo for having the first cover art ever that doesn't portray him as a white man.
I would also like to mention that the Paizo edition is a very nice book. Well bound, large format and with very thick covers. This will look great in my collection!
"The Secret of Sinharat" is the book for you if you love SF adventure where the wonder and adventure are matched with brilliant writing, great dialog and people who behave like real people.
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