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Gateway
to Paradise,
The Collected
Stories of Jack Williamson, Volume Six
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QUICK
LINKS
Leigh Brackett
Captain Future
Edmond Hamilton
Collected Stories of
Jack Williamson
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FOR
CHARITY
In Memory of
Wonder's Child
Edited by
Stephen Haffner

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Home | Books
| Lorelei of the Red Mist
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Lorelei of the Red
Mist:
Planetary Romances
Leigh
Brackett
Foreword by Ray
Bradbury
Introduction by Harry
Turtledove
Illustrated
by Frank
Kelly Freas
ISBN-10
1893887243
ISBN-13 9781893887244
$40.00
496 pages Hardcover
Description
Picking up
where Martian
Quest: The
Early Brackett left off, this
volume collects 12 more tales of
strange adventures on other worlds from the undisputed "Queen of Space
Opera." Drawn from Planet
Stories
and Thrilling
Wonder
Stories
pulp magazines, this tome revels in the 1946 titular collaboration with
Ray Bradbury--who also contributes an original poem about Leigh
Brackett as well as an essay about meeting & working with
Brackett. Harry Turtledove, the modern master of "alternate
history," provides the introduction and the book is adorned with Frank
Kelly Freas' vintage illustrations from the 1953 reprint of "Lorelei of
the Red Mist."
In a review of Martian Quest: The Early Brackett,
Paul di Filippo says "Plainly, Brackett was growing with every story
she wrote, not yet 30 years old
by the volume's end, with the best yet to come." Lorelei
of the Red Mist: Planetary Romances is where some of that "best"
can found.
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Table of Contents
"Foreword"
by Ray
Bradbury
"Introduction" by Harry Turtledove
"The Blue Behemoth" (Planet
Stories, May '43)
"Thralls of the Endless Night" (Planet Stories, Fll '43)
"The Jewel of Bas" (Planet Stories, Spr '44)
"The Veil
of Astellar" (Thrilling Wonder Stories, Spr '44)
"Terror Out
of Space" (Planet Stories, Sum '44)
"The
Vanishing Venusians" (Planet Stories, Spr '45)
"Lorelei of
the Red Mist" (with Ray Bradbury) (Planet Stories, Sum '46)
"The Moon
That Vanished (Thrilling Wonder Stories, Oct '48)
"The
Beast-Jewel of Mars" (Planet Stories, Win '48)
"Quest of
the Starhope" (Thrilling Wonder Stories, Apr '49)
"The Lake
of the Gone Forever" (Thrilling Wonder Stories, Oct '49)
"The
Dancing Girl of Ganymede" (Thrilling Wonder Stories, Feb '50)
"The
Science-Fiction Field"
by
Leigh Brackett (Writer's Digest,
Jul '44)
Reviews
"A" "This
welcome volume follows hard on the heels of Martian Quest: The Early Brackett and
finds our tough-minded, talented and productive author (1915-1978) at
the top of her form, as her richly conceived "inhabitable Solar System"
truly becomes a glorious, fully realized milieu for the rousing hybrid
adventures she wished to tell.
Containing 12 very long stories, plus two separate introductions (by
Ray Bradbury and Harry Turtledove) and a concluding essay on SF by
Brackett, Lorelei is replete
with hard-bitten protagonists with wounded psyches, females both
nurturing and malevolent, weird alien life forms, strange planetary
environments, danger, treachery, camaraderie and even spiritual
epiphanies. In short, this book holds the essence of SF—at least, the
essence of one very important school of it.
In "The Blue Behemoth," a down-and-out circus relies on a monster named
Gertrude as its star attraction. But one day Gertrude's true nature
manifests itself. ... "Thralls of the Endless Night" details the fate
of a crash-landed colony whose citizens have forgotten their heritage
and must face the threat of extinction on a world they never intended
to inhabit. The seedy pair of Mouse and Ciaran, lovers and rogues, must
face androids and brutish "Kalds" in order to steal their prize from an
immortal boy in "The Jewel of Bas." Spaceships go to their doom in "The
Veil of Astellar," but we learn the Veil's not a natural hazard, but a
lure from another dimension.
"Terror Out of Space" finds seductive aliens arriving on Venus;
meanwhile 3,800 wanderers search for a place to call home in "The
Vanishing Venusians." A crummy thief named Hugh Starke finds himself
transferred to the body of a warrior named Conan, fighting a war of
strange factions, in the title story, co-written with Bradbury. And to
save himself, David Heath must confront the mysterious phenomenon known
as "the Moonfire" in "The Moon That Vanished."
Burk Winters learns that his tendency toward atavism has deadly
consequences in "The Beast-Jewel of Mars." Ready to plunder any native
ruins, Bert Quintal finds his undoing when he encounters the "People of
the Sky" in "Quest of the Starhope." "The Lake of the Gone Forever" is
the lure that draws Rand Conway into peril, while for Tony Harrah it's
"The Dancing Girl of Ganymede."
Characters
tested to destruction
The currents that converge into the Sea of Brackett, creating the salty
savor of her prose, are many, and are both literary and extra-literary.
Among the former, we can tease out her admiration for such writers as
A. Merritt, Robert E. Howard, Dashiell Hammett and a dozen other
pulpsters who trafficked in over-the-top adventure. Fascinated equally
by scenes of otherworldly beauty, civilized decadence, barbarian vigor
and naturalistic lowlife criminality, Brackett was continually
adjusting her personal equation of all these factors to produce stories
showcasing varying ratios of these elements. In one tale, such as
"Thralls of the Endless Night," decadence and half-remembered legends
take precedence. "Terror Out of Space" verges toward Lovecraftian
horror. "The Jewel of Bas" hews more toward sword and sorcery.
And then some stories strike all the mingled notes perfectly, producing
that unique Brackett fusion. My favorite in this volume is "The Veil of
Astellar," which features spaceflight, immortality, an alien succubus,
self-sacrifice and virginal innocence.
As for extra-literary influences, the primary one is the cinema.
Brackett was saturated with the products of Tinseltown, possessing a
naturally cinematic narrative voice and sensibility. Like Will Eisner,
who modeled many of his femmes fatales on Hollywood starlets, I'm
convinced Brackett envisioned Humphrey Bogart as practically all of her
leading men.
We also have to consider the role of current events in her fiction. The
1940s arguably marked the last time our globe seemed to possess
untouched exotic locales. Exploits of explorers such as Frank Buck, the
animal collector, could still resonate. Orientalism still held sway.
The notion of undiscovered lands seemed at least barely plausible.
Brackett took these keenly felt romantic terrestrial notions and
transplanted them to other worlds, in the process magnifying and
bejeweling all that was alluring and mysterious about our own planet.
In this sense, her seemingly outrageous fantasies resonated even more
strongly on a subconscious level, as she fed her readers the outre
environments that they sensed lurked just beyond America's borders,
"beyond the fields we know."
As always, a
Haffner Press book is a sturdy, durable, delightful objet d'art, and a
bargain, from its beautiful Freas cover and endpapers to the heavy
stock of its pages.
—Paul di Filippo, Science Fiction Weekly
Excerpts
TBA
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