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North by 2000+ door H. A. Hargreaves
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North by 2000+ (editie 2012)

door H. A. Hargreaves

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H.A. Hargreaves is one of Canada's remarkable, one might even say legendary, speculative fiction writers. He is a retired professor of English, formerly at the University of Alberta (Edmonton), and was twice nominated (1982 and 1983) for the Lifetime Contributions category in the Prix Auroras. His collection of short stories, North by 2000, in its time received wide critical acclaim from both peers and periodicals. Five Rivers is pleased to present the rebirth of that remarkable collection of short stories by Hargreaves. This new edition, entitled North by 2000+, features not only all the quintessentially Canadian stories of the first edition, but five additional published short works, along with a foreword from the author, and an introduction by Dr. Robert Runte.… (meer)
Lid:Runte
Titel:North by 2000+
Auteurs:H. A. Hargreaves
Info:Five Rivers Chapmanry (2012), Paperback, 278 pages
Verzamelingen:Jouw bibliotheek
Waardering:*****
Trefwoorden:Canadian SF

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North by 2000+ door H.A. Hargreaves

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I received a free copy of this e-book from the publisher as part of the LibraryThing Early Reviewers Program in an exchange for an honest review.
“North by 2000+” is an updated collection of science-fiction short stories by Canadian author H.A. Hargreaves. Originally published in 1970s, the new publication has additional 4 stories as well as an interesting afterword by Robert Runté.
This was my very first encounter with Canadian literature, not with the science fiction genre however, as I’ve always been a fan of SF legend Stanislaw Lem. Even though the stories were written decades ago and are therefore quite dated at this stage, this is quite an enjoyable collection and certainly worth reading if you’re into SF literature. Hargreaves made it work for me with his excellent writing style and great storytelling as well as by putting an Everyman, an ordinary person, in the spotlight as the main character of his stories. I especially liked “Dead to the World”, “Protected Environment” and “More Things in Heaven and Earth”, I’ve found them all quite gripping and hard to put down. Unfortunately the collection was a bit uneven for me, with some stories a bit dull and uninspiring. I also liked the afterword to the book which gave me some understanding of the Canadian SF style of writing.
It was an interesting read altogether, and a book that I would certainly recommend to SF fans out there regardless of their age. ( )
  justine28 | Jul 24, 2013 |
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There are four possible audiences for this collection.

Fans of Hargreaves or admirers of North by 2000 will want this book. It adds four stories to that earlier volume to make it a complete collection of Hargreaves’ science fiction.

Students of Canadian science fiction will definitely want it. As editor Runté notes, North by 2000, published in 1975, was the first collection of science fiction stories to be explicitly marketed as belonging to a Canadian. In his very useful and interesting afterword, Runté talks about the themes and their implications which set Canadian science fiction apart from that of the British or American variety. Like so many Canadian science fiction writers, Hargreaves was an immigrant – from the Bronx, specifically. He lived and taught literature at a Canadian college and eventually became a Canadian citizen. While Hargreaves submitted stories to the American magazine Analog, its editor, John W. Campbell, never accepted any. All the stories of the original volume were published in British publications, and some of the additional ones first saw light in non-genre Canadian magazines. Runté shows how the Canadian preoccupation with the polar world, national disaster (even if only of the political sort), and alienated outsiders plays out in specific Hargreaves’ stories, stories whose protagonists are often “victims, or losers with occasional wins”.

If you like to read old science fiction, however technologically dated, for insights into the time it was written (here 1963-2011), you’ll probably like this collection. Most share a common world, a future Americanada (which, as Runté notes, could be construed as a national political disaster for a Canadian) administered by vast computer banks, a universal welfare state where people carry their resumes and bank information on AP punch cards aka All Purpose Cards, where penal systems have been greatly modified (including, in one instance, mandatory hockey lessons), people live in Efficiency Living Spaces with fold up furniture, pipelines cross the wilderness and cities are being built in the Arctic waste. Yes, these stories are from that era in science fiction when vast national and international projects were dreamed, central planning and administration was the vogue, and the psychological sciences were thought to be able to solve old and new problems.

However, whether the fourth audience, the general science fiction reader looking just for entertainment, will like this book is more problematic. By my judgment, only about half the stories fit that requirement.

Let’s look at those first.

“Dead to the World” is a humorous story about a man who is declared dead because of an extremely unlikely computer error. The robots of this world – and the humans who uncuriously and unfailingly don’t break out of their administrative routines – take his furniture, cart him off to the morgue when he goes to the hospital, won’t arrest him for vagrancy, and deny him meals at the “autoteria”. Darkly humorous, this Canadian finds a change in mental attitude is necessary for his survival.

“Protected Environment” is a straight-out, suspenseful man against nature tale. Its hero, identified only as the Roughneck, is sent out to fix damage in an oil pipeline’s insulation. The story can also be read as a play on Jack London’s classic “Building a Fire”.

“Cainn” is one of those penal system of the future stories where all the intrigues and rebellions and plans of the prisoner, here one 15 year old Jason Berkley, have already been anticipated by the wardens and calculated into their plans for his rehabilitation.

“More Things in Heaven and Earth” gets its prediction of remote learning right in spirit – if not in facilitating technology but is way too optimistic in its idea of how popular Shakespeare will become. The actual plot involves a lecturer and a cadre of tv producers and actors who demonstrate various interpretations of Shakespeare’s bare words. The tv program is threatened by sabotage conscious and unconscious, in the latter case from an telepathic student. The main interest for me was literature professor Hargreaves’ comments on particular Shakespeare works.

“2020 Vision” is a dark story from 1980 which imagines a very unpleasant set of years for Canada from 2015 to 2050, the year of its setting. Its repairman hero, also working, as a former political science student, on a history of the time, may be a man stuck in the past.

“In His Moccasins” is a follow up to “Cainn” and imagines another manifestation of Americanada’s juvenile justice system.

And now for the just ok stories.

“Tangled Web” has for a protagonist one of the minor characters from “Dead to the World”, a minister assigned to be the spiritual advisor of a “Closed Environment”, a domed city in the Arctic. It’s more about socially engineering bureaucracies than hardware. Its hero must work not only with a multi-faith community but the UN and Americanada.

“Tee Vee Man”, the earliest story (1963) here, has a repairman working in space on a tv relay satellite to avoid a political revolution in some unnamed African country.

“’Fore’-Eight-Sixteen” is a future sports story – the invention of a form of golf with jetpacks and rocket powered balls and hi-tech drivers.

“Infinite Variation” has a missionary to an alien world wondering if he may be unpleasantly called upon to play the part of a particular character in a new rendition of the story of Christ.

“Venerian Vector-Transit Tales” is a goofy short-short written as the description of a pulpy science fiction book club selection – for aliens. ( )
1 stem RandyStafford | Jan 8, 2013 |
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This is the first ever Canadian science fiction that I've read. In spite of the 'age' of the stories they feel somewhat dated in cases but are overall still modern (if you ignore the title and make that for example 3000+ to be on the safe side). What I like is that a 'universe' is built and consistently used. Some of the stories were gripping where others plainly boring. The stories 'Dead to the world' and 'Tee Vee man' were really enjoyable. The extra chapter on the relation between canadian vs british / american science fiction was quite boring to me. Also as this is the first canadian science fiction I've read I'm not really sure that this is a prime example (and find comparisons to some of the american authors I've read from the same period (70's)). ( )
1 stem hydrografie | Oct 19, 2012 |
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Some interesting ideas, but the stories did not age well in many cases. ( )
  Guide2 | Sep 21, 2012 |
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North by 2000+ is a collection of science-fiction stories originally published over several decades by author H. A. Hargreaves. I enjoyed the stories very much, particularly "Dead to the World", "Cainn", "Tee Vee Man" and "More Things in Heaven and Earth". Alhough these stories were written many years ago and there are some discrepancies between the future as Hargreaves had envisioned it and the reality as it is today, the stories do not feel dated. It is Hargreaves's exploration of human relationships, to one another and to the environment, in an imagined setting that makes the stories memorable. I also found Runte's commentary on "Canadian science-fiction" and how it differs from that of the British and American tradition thought-provoking.

Having experienced hits and misses with small publishers, I was genuinely surprised by the quality of the writing. I recently finished all the short stories and novelettes nominated for this year's Hugo awards, and certainly, Hargreaves's stories would not suffer in comparison. I'm glad that Five Rivers Publishing has chosen to reprint his work, as it deserves a wider audience. ( )
  mathgirl40 | Sep 8, 2012 |
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The 2012 collection North by 2000+ (editions ISBNs 978-0-9866423-9-5 and 978-0-9866423-7-1) is an expansion of the original 1976 'North by 2000' by five more works of shortfiction, according to amazon.com.
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H.A. Hargreaves is one of Canada's remarkable, one might even say legendary, speculative fiction writers. He is a retired professor of English, formerly at the University of Alberta (Edmonton), and was twice nominated (1982 and 1983) for the Lifetime Contributions category in the Prix Auroras. His collection of short stories, North by 2000, in its time received wide critical acclaim from both peers and periodicals. Five Rivers is pleased to present the rebirth of that remarkable collection of short stories by Hargreaves. This new edition, entitled North by 2000+, features not only all the quintessentially Canadian stories of the first edition, but five additional published short works, along with a foreword from the author, and an introduction by Dr. Robert Runte.

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