Mark Twain's unsettling imagination and passionate curiosity roamed far and wide-racing across microscopic worlds and interstellar voids, leaping ahead to fearful futures, and speculating on dazzling inventions to come. Tales of Wonder features some of the most notable but little-known science fiction available, penned by the famed American humorist and writer. With characteristic wit and acuity, Twain embarks on an epic journey into a drop of water, catches a glimpse of an invisible man, reveals a generation-starship-type world in the heart of a drifting iceberg, and imagines futuristic devices of instantaneous communication such as the "phrenophone" and "telelectroscope." Twain pioneered the use of time travel to the past in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. As for the future, he envisioned a radical utopia of absolute suffrage and future histories in which a global theocracy holds sway or a monarchy rules America. This entertaining and absorbing collection of tales reminds us that the former steamboat pilot dreamed about the stars, anticipated and dreaded the future, and above all was continually surprised and enchanted by the world around him. Mark Twain (1835-1910) was the author of such classics as The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn as well as many short stories, including those appearing in the recent collection, How Nancy Jackson Married Kate Wilson and Other Tales of Rebellious Girls and Daring Young Women (Nebraska 2001). David Ketterer is an emeritus professor of English at Concordia University in Montreal and an honorary research fellow in the Department of English at the University of Liverpool. He is the author of numerous books, including Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy and Imprisoned in a Tesseract: The Life and Work of James Blish.
I knew Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, but that was all I would have associated with Mark Twain and Science Fiction. Then this book, from the wonderful Bison Frontiers of Imagination series, caught my eye. I try to purchase any of the Bison books that are available inexpensively and seem interesting. Anyway, combine predictions of future Utopias (think H.G. Wells) with Twain's populism and wit, add in some extrapolated technologies (a la Verne), and you have the beginnings of a picture. This is actually the second reminder than Twain is far more than Huck Finn, Tom Sawyer, and the riverboat captain. While I was living in Hawaii I had the good fortune to see mention of Twain's visit and read the wonderful Mark Twain in Hawaii.
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