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Empire

(Part of the Terro-Human Future History Series and Federation (#6) Series)

A great combination of Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Sociology as only Piper could do it in this entertaining story. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Acceptable

$5.09
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Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Companion piece to Piper's _Federation_

The "Terro-Human Future History Chronology" is not a story, but rather a timeline with approximate dates derived from Piper's stories, starting with the year 1 Atomic Era (A.E.) = 1942 A.D./C.E. - the calendar dates from the year the first atomic pile went into operation, and ending with a date from "Ministry of Disturbance".John F. Carr's "Introduction" is interesting; among other things, he laments the third, lost Fuzzy novel, which was found after _Empire_'s release and published as _Fuzzies and Other People_, I'm thankful to say. For a discussion of other Piper material that went missing after his death in 1963, see Pournelle's introduction to the paperback edition of the Piper collection _Federation_. Piper's death at his own hand, believing (wrongly) that his career was finished and thus could no longer meet his obligations, left his estate in a tremendous tangle, hence the decades when his works were out of print. I can only hope that more "lost" drafts of Piper's work move into the "found" category. After a brief lament on Piper's death, Carr moves on to present an overview of Piper's Terro-Human Future History, of which the Fuzzy novels were only the best-known part, not the whole.On to the 5 Piper stories comprising this book. Each is prefaced by a paragraph or two by Carr, clarifying where it falls in the timeline and providing a little commentary."The Edge of the Knife" predates the founding of the Federation, let alone the First Empire, but fits into this collection quite nicely. Professor Chalmers' memory occasionally works both ways; teaching his Modern History IV class in 1973, he begins drawing a comparison to an assassination that will not happen for another two months. (He once tried to get a copy of _Rise and Decline of the System States_ from the college library before remembering that it wouldn't be published until the 28th century.) He always meticulously records his memories of the future, but can't control when they'll crop up, something that's beginning to endanger him.I wish I'd had a history teacher like him, with or without the two-way memory. He's neither a fool nor detached from reality; he became convinced of his future memories' reality only when those of the near-future passed under the knife-edge of the present to be verified in detail. When the college president tries to stampede him into resigning, Chalmers promptly invokes his tenure, then explains the situation to his lawyer over lunch. While Whitburn can't break him over a slip of the tongue, unfitness to teach - as in, "proving" Chalmers insane - *would* give Whitburn leverage."A Slave Is a Slave" takes place during the early years of the first Empire: the annexation of Aditya, a culture in which everyone is either a Lord-Master, or a slave. Into this society, the Empire has sent Count Erskyll, a young radical who for his first proconsulate assignment was sent to this backwater, where he couldn't possibly do much harm.Right.For an Aditya-like alien society

These stories are all excellent

H. Beam Piper was one of the premier science-fiction authors of the 1960s, and should rightly be considered one of the all-time greats in that field. This book is a collection of his short stories, all but one set in his Terro-Human Future History. The edition I have (1981 Ace) starts out with a very nice chronology, and then continues with an excellent introduction by John F. Carr.The following five stories are included in this book. 1) Edge of the Knife is chronologically the earliest of the Terro-Human Future History stories, and is set in 1973. It tells the story of Edward Chalmers, an American history professor who finds future history invading his consciousness. 2) A Slave is a Slave tells the story of the planet Aditya's absorption by the First Empire, and the path a planet of slaves and masters takes can be quite surprising. 3) Ministry of Disturbance is of Mr. Piper's greatest works. It tells the story of an ossified Empire, and the "great and dreadful changes" that are headed for it. 4) The Return is not actually part of the Terro-Human Future History, but is an excellent story. In the aftermath of the atomic wars, a group of scientists begin to reach out to fellow survivors, but what they find is full of surprises. 5) The final story is The Keeper, and it tells a story set during the Fifth Empire(!), when Terra is nearly forgotten and slipping into a new ice age. And in a small backwater village, a treasure is protected by its keeper, a man who doesn't even know what its significance is.These stories are all excellent, and keep you on the edge of your seat. Piper took a somewhat Toynbean view of history, that is that civilizations rise, stagnate and fall, and then new civilizations rise from their ashes. It is this dynamic unfolding of his history that makes Piper's works so very fascinating.I really enjoyed these stories, and recommend this book to you!
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