Impossible things

Connie Willis

Book - 1994

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SCIENCE FICTION/Willis, Connie
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Subjects
Published
New York : Bantam Books 1994, c1993.
Language
English
Main Author
Connie Willis (-)
Physical Description
461 p.
ISBN
9780553564365
  • The last of the Winnebagos
  • Even the queen
  • Schwarzchild Radius
  • Ado
  • Spice pogrom
  • Winter's tale
  • Chance
  • In the late cretaceous
  • Time out
  • Jack
  • At the Rialto.
Review by Booklist Review

Ranging in style from biting satire to speculative history, Willis' second collection of short fiction displays a versatility of form and conception few in the genre can match. A frequent sf award recipient throughout the last decade, Willis opens with her Hugo- and Nebula-winning "Last of the Winnebagos," a brilliant though sobering peek into a future devoid of either RVs or man's best friend. Here, in following a photographer's detective-style leaps of discovery, Willis reveals an almost razor-sharp wit--an edge that cuts just as effectively even in her less serious, more satirical pieces. "Spice Pogrom," for instance, is a hilarious pastiche of Hollywood screwball comedies in which materialistic aliens with unpronounceable names misunderstand almost every communication with their human hosts. Some tales, such as "Ado," in which ubiquitous political correctness leaves only a page of Shakespeare uncensored for an English class, deserve immediate recognition as classics. Gardner Dozois' laudatory introduction justifiably cites this as one of the best short story collections of the year. An impressive showcase for a major sf talent. ~--Carl HaysNON-BOXED REVIEWS

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Willis ( Lincoln's Dreams ) demonstrates her sly wit and quirky perspective in this solid collection of 11 previously published science fiction pieces. Romance becomes entangled with interplanetary negotiations when a Navy linguist and the neglected fiancee of an officious NASA diplomat try to keep a visiting alien happy--even though language problems obscure whether the powers-that-be are arranging a space program or a spice pogrom. In a story that will look like SF only to readers who have steered clear of higher education lately, a consultant promoting ``relevantness'' and modern pedagogical theory nips at the heels of professors teaching paleontology at a state university. During the Battle of Britain, a Civil Defense worker gains a disturbing insight into himself and the war from a mysterious volunteer who has an uncanny ability to locate bombing victims buried under rubble. Willis's fondness for Shakespeare translates into two stories: one considers how much text would be left intact if all right-wing, left-wing and special-interest groups could delete the bits of which they do not approve; the other tackles the old conundrum, If Shakespeare wasn't Shakespeare, who was? (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Eleven short stories by one of sf's most exciting new voices explores topics that range from Shakespeare to feminism to quantum physics. Most of these stories have only seen magazine publication. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by School Library Journal Review

YA‘This must-have collection includes several of Willis's prize-winning (Hugo and Nebula) stories. Any library buffeted by the winds of censorship needs to include ``Ado,'' a hilarious send-up in which the attempt to please everyone is carried to its logical extreme. ``Spice Pogrom'' makes it clear exactly how difficult real communication is, and ``Schwarzchild Radius'' is a fascinating whole-language addition to the physics curriculum. ``Even the Queen,'' however, is the indispensable selection. The author's introductions to each piece are a lovely bonus. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

THE LAST OF THE WINNEBAGOS   On the way out to Tempe I saw a dead jackal in the road. I was in the far left lane of Van Buren, ten lanes away from it, and its long legs were facing away from me, the squarish muzzle flat against the pavement so it looked narrower than it really was, and for a minute I thought it was a dog.   I had not seen an animal in the road like that for fifteen years. They can't get onto the divideds, of course, and most of the multiways are fenced. And people are more careful of their animals.   The jackal was probably somebody's pet. This part of Phoenix was mostly residential, and after all this time, people still think they can turn the nasty, carrion-loving creatures into pets. Which was no reason to have hit it and, worse, left it there. It's a felony to strike an animal and another one to not report it, but whoever had hit it was long gone.   I pulled the Hitori over onto the center shoulder and sat there awhile, staring at the empty multiway. I wondered who had hit it and whether they had stopped to see if it was dead.   Katie had stopped. She had hit the brakes so hard, she sent the car into a skid that brought it up against the ditch, and jumped out of the Jeep. I was still running toward him, floundering in the snow. We made it to him almost at the same time. I knelt beside him, the camera dangling from my neck, its broken case hanging half-open.   "I hit him," Katie had said. "I hit him with the Jeep."   I looked in the rearview mirror. I couldn't even see over the pile of camera equipment in the backseat with the eisenstadt balanced on top. I got out. I had come nearly a mile, and looking back, I couldn't see the jackal, though I knew now that's what it was.   "McCombe! David! Are you there yet?" Ramirez's voice said from inside the car.   I leaned in. "No," I shouted in the general direction of the phone's mike. "I'm still on the multiway."   "Mother of God, what's taking you so long? The governor's conference is at twelve, and I want you to go out to Scottsdale and do a layout on the closing of Taliessin West. The appointment's for ten. Listen, McCombe, I got the poop on the Amblers for you. They bill themselves as 'One Hundred Percent Authentic,' but they're not. Their RV isn't really a Winnebago, it's an Open Road. It is the last RV on the road, though, according to Highway Patrol. A man named Eldridge was touring with one, also not a Winnebago, a Shasta, until March, but he lost his license in Oklahoma for using a tanker lane, so this is it. Recreation vehicles are banned in all but four states. Texas has legislation in committee, and Utah has a full-divided bill coming up next month. Arizona will be next, so take lots of pictures, Davey boy. This may be your last chance. And get some of the zoo."   "What about the Amblers?" I said.   "Their name is Ambler, believe it or not. I ran a lifeline on them. He was a welder. She was a bank teller. No kids. They've been doing this since eighty-nine when he retired. Nineteen years. David, are you using the eisenstadt?"   We had been through this the last three times I'd been on a shoot. "I'm not there yet," I said.   "Well, I want you to use it at the governor's conference. Set it on his desk if you can."   I intended to set it on a desk, all right. One of the desks at the back, and let it get some nice shots of the rear ends of reporters as they reached wildly for a little clear airspace to shoot their pictures in, some of them holding their vidcams in their upstretched arms and aiming them in what they hope is the right direction because they can't see the governor at all, let it get a nice shot of one of the reporter's arms as he knocked it facedown on the desk.   "This one's a new model. It's got a trigger. It's set for faces, full-lengths, and vehicles."   So great. I come home with a hundred-frame cartridge full of passersby and tricycles. How the hell did it know when to click the shutter or which one the governor was in a press conference of eight hundred people, full-length or face? It was supposed to have all kinds of fancy light-metrics and computer-composition features, but all it could really do was mindlessly snap whatever passed in front of its idiot lens, just like the highway speed cameras.   It had probably been designed by the same government types who'd put the highway cameras along the road instead of overhead so that all it takes is a little speed to reduce the new side-license plates to a blur, and people go faster than ever. A great camera, the eisenstadt. I could hardly wait to use it.   "Sun-Co's very interested in the eisenstadt," Ramirez said. She didn't say good-bye. She never does. She just stops talking and then starts up again later. I looked back in the direction of the jackal.   The multiway was completely deserted. New cars and singles don't use the undivided multiways much, even during rush hours. Too many of the little cars have been squashed by tankers. Usually there are at least a few obsoletes and renegade semis taking advantage of the Patrol's being on the divideds, but there wasn't anybody at all.   I got back in the car and backed up even with the jackal. I turned off the ignition but didn't get out. I could see the trickle of blood from its mouth from here. A tanker went roaring past out of nowhere, trying to beat the cameras, straddling the three middle lanes and crushing the jackal's rear half to a bloody mush. It was a good thing I hadn't been trying to cross the road. He never would have even seen me.   I started the car and drove to the nearest off-ramp to find a phone. There was one at an old 7-Eleven on McDowell.   "I'm calling to report a dead animal on the road," I told the woman who answered the Society's phone.   "Name and number?"   "It's a jackal," I said. "It's between Thirtieth and Thirty-second on Van Buren. It's in the far right lane."   "Did you render emergency assistance?"   "There was no assistance to be rendered. It was dead."   "Did you move the animal to the side of the road?"   "No."   "Why not?" she said, her tone suddenly sharper, more alert.   Because I thought it was a dog. "I didn't have a shovel," I said, and hung up."   Excerpted from Impossible Things by Connie Willis All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.