"It's a painful irony that this book appears now, right after the events in Tienanmen Square. I am reminded of something a Chinese-American SF writer told me, after his trip to China. The writers there explained to him that they had considerable freedom at the present (prehaps three years ago), but there was no guarantee that the government wouldn't snap down on them at any moment. And now, of course, it has, so this book is a showcase of a literary development nipped in the bud. None of the stores is likely to be popular with American readers. They are all very crude, on the Gernsback-early-pulp level. But as academic exercises, they show what would-be SF writers in China are (or were) thinking. (They were thinking a good deal about the West. They had read much Western SF). Included is Wei Yahua's "Conjugal Happiness in the Arms of Morpheus," the very story which shut down Chinese science fiction for a year, because, in the guise of a critique of Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics, it subtly questions authority and suggests that the future could possibly be other than a rosy utopia. Publishers were so afraid of the consequences of this story that they stopped publishing SF. Now, of course, they have a much better reason for jitters."-Aboriginal Science Fiction
"This fine anthology of eight stories by six authors shows that, while years behind the west in terms of maturity of the genre, China is catching up as fast as the state will allow. Editor Dingbo Wu's excellent introduction gives a historical overview of SF in China, while detailing the fluctuations of political acceptability during the past decade. If the plots are generally familiar, the stories convey the freshness with which the authors approached them, making them each one more than just another variation on an old theme. Wei Yahua's Conjugal Happiness in the Arms of Morpheus' finds a new way to bring a robot to life. The Mysterious Wave' by Wang Xiada and Death Ray on a Coral Island' by Tong Enzheng are both classic gadget stories. Conversely, Ye Yonglie's Corrosion' is mostly concerned with the moral dilemma of desired fame vs. livable self-image. The chronological bibliography of Chinese SF is a valuable resource."-Publishers Weekly
?This fine anthology of eight stories by six authors shows that, while years behind the west in terms of maturity of the genre, China is catching up as fast as the state will allow. Editor Dingbo Wu's excellent introduction gives a historical overview of SF in China, while detailing the fluctuations of political acceptability during the past decade. If the plots are generally familiar, the stories convey the freshness with which the authors approached them, making them each one more than just another variation on an old theme. Wei Yahua's Conjugal Happiness in the Arms of Morpheus' finds a new way to bring a robot to life. The Mysterious Wave' by Wang Xiada and Death Ray on a Coral Island' by Tong Enzheng are both classic gadget stories. Conversely, Ye Yonglie's Corrosion' is mostly concerned with the moral dilemma of desired fame vs. livable self-image. The chronological bibliography of Chinese SF is a valuable resource.?-Publishers Weekly
?It's a painful irony that this book appears now, right after the events in Tienanmen Square. I am reminded of something a Chinese-American SF writer told me, after his trip to China. The writers there explained to him that they had considerable freedom at the present (prehaps three years ago), but there was no guarantee that the government wouldn't snap down on them at any moment. And now, of course, it has, so this book is a showcase of a literary development nipped in the bud. None of the stores is likely to be popular with American readers. They are all very crude, on the Gernsback-early-pulp level. But as academic exercises, they show what would-be SF writers in China are (or were) thinking. (They were thinking a good deal about the West. They had read much Western SF). Included is Wei Yahua's "Conjugal Happiness in the Arms of Morpheus," the very story which shut down Chinese science fiction for a year, because, in the guise of a critique of Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics, it subtly questions authority and suggests that the future could possibly be other than a rosy utopia. Publishers were so afraid of the consequences of this story that they stopped publishing SF. Now, of course, they have a much better reason for jitters.?-Aboriginal Science Fiction
"I thank each one of the individual Chinese science fiction writers whose works are included here--and all those others who could not be included--for their devoted efforts to bring to the Chinese people those special insights and understandings that science fiction, of all literatures, is best able to provide. And, particularly, I thank Patrick D. Murphy and Wu Dingbo for their labors in preparing this volume so that the English-speaking part of the world can share the results of their efforts."-Frederick Pohl, from the foreword