Book Report: Space Wars: Worlds & Weapons by Steven Eisler (1979)
In retrospect, Tamara K. was not
recommending this book at all. She mistook it for something else. This is not a Stewart Cowley book, this is a Steven Eisler book. I didn't expect Tam would remember fondly a book that called Robert A. Heinlein a fascist.
Okay, here's what we have: a book of unrelated space paintings with essays about the evolution of science fiction stories. Within these texts, we discuss how some science fiction is juvenile (that is, the right-winged stuff). Also, the first half of the Fantasy chapter is about sex, not, you know,
fantasy fiction. It's hard to square elitist academic posturing with space paintings, but even demigeeks can get tenure, I guess.
Then, within the captions, we have the schtick that this is some historical document from millenia hence with a history of mankind's space travel. Each disparate painting is worked into this timeline, including the images from obvious fantasy novels.
It was meh. Coffeetable art book for science fiction geeks from the 1970s. Even though I've read some of the novels the book refers to (mostly in a derogatory light, since if they were enjoyable, they were right-winged Power-Is-Truth stuff, unlike
Solaris which was mind-broadening, man).
But it counts as a book that I've read this year, and I did it during a baseball game. Woo.
Books mentioned in this review: