The Stars My Destination | |||||
Alfred Bester | |||||
Orion Millennium Books, 250 pages | |||||
A review by Lisa DuMond
You've probably seen The Stars My Destination included in every science fiction top ten list published. Forty-five years
have passed since it was first published and it's yet to be knocked out of the masters' circle. That's a pretty impressive
statement. Bester's classic has the stuff to back it up.
Meet Gully Foyle. He's not exactly one of the good guys, but he's your hero for this trip. Foyle's life has never
been easy, but as the novel opens he is in about the worst predicament of his life -- stranded in space, alone, with little
or no chance of rescue. Like I said, the worst scrape of his life... yet. Things are bound to get better for Foyle; things
for the people who betrayed him are bound to get so much worse.
Call him what you want: criminal, victim, have-not, survivor, scoundrel; he is at all times a very dangerous man. If
revenge is a dish best served cold, Foyle doesn't have the time or passion to wait around for it to cool.
Get ready for some rough stuff. Really rough stuff. But, will vengeance be as sweet as he hopes?
Bester's portrayal of a divided society where the rich are the real masters of the universe, is social commentary at its
best. It's a lesson that slips seamlessly into the brain, riding on the back of a non-stop action story. This world, where
a jaunte can transport a person's body across thousands of miles, is closed to someone like Foyle who appears to be not
worth the time and trouble it takes to teach this feat.
The Stars My Destination holds on to its coveted top ten rating with its dazzling mixture of tantalizing plot,
multi-faceted cast of characters, social commentary, and chilling speculation. Thousands of science fiction stories have been
published since this amazing novel appeared in 1956. Good, bad, superb -- none has bumped Bester's landmark novel from the
list of the genre's true classics.
Space opera, adventure story, heroic journey, and wry social commentary -- consider it Bester's own
Count of Monte Cristo, with a less noble background, of course. But, nobility is a relative thing in Gully
Foyle's universe; give this ripping tale a good read and make up your own mind. And be ready to join in the next
discussion of the truly stellar examples of science fiction.
In between reviews and interviews, Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. DARKERS, her latest novel, will be published in early 2000 by Hard Shell Word Factory. She has also written for BOOKPAGE and PUBLISHERS WEEKLY. Her articles and short stories are all over the map. You can check out Lisa and her work at her website hikeeba!. |
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