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8 Sci-Fi Cops Having a Bad Day/Week/Month/Life

Solving crime in a science-fiction universe is a heck of a headache, as any one of these eight unlucky protagonists could tell you. Between parallel universes, marauding androids, and neverending darkness, solving the crime of the future has plenty of unique challenges.

Chris Shane from opens in a new windowHead On by John Scalzi

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 84 In John Scalzi’s near-future novel Head On, a small percentage of the population is locked into non-functional bodies. They interact with the world through “threeps”, expensive robots that walk and talk like regular people–and have the added bonus of being less delicate than human bodies. That’s a lucky fact for Chris, an FBI Agent who seems to end up in a lot of situations that destroy threeps: fires, car crashes, defenestrations…let’s just say Chris, or more specifically Chris’s threeps, are having a very bad week in Scalzi’s latest.

Jon Phillips from opens in a new windowDayfall by Michael David Ares

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 88 Manhattan has been shrouded in darkness for years thanks to a nuclear winter, cut off from the world by a seawall keeping out the rising water. Crime thrives, and a corrupt and apathetic police force can’t keep pace. Then, just as the sun starts to return, a serial killer appears.

Flown in to help, Jon Phillips is a small-town cop who’s collared a serial killer before. Out of his depth in the big city, Jon doesn’t just have to stop a killer, but also stay alive in an unfamiliar city where he can’t trust anyone. Easy as pie.

Takeshi Lev Kovacs from opens in a new windowAltered Carbon by Richard K. Morgan

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 78 It’s the twenty-fifth century, and people are now able to transfer their consciousness between bodies. Takeshi Kovacs is an ex-soldier turned private investigator, hired to investigate the possible murder of a wealthy man – living again in a new body, but with no memories of the two days before his death. Kovacs himself is fresh off his own traumatic death, re-embodied and thrown in the deep end of a far-reaching, vicious, conspiracy.

Elijah Baley from opens in a new windowThe Caves of Steel by Isaac Asimov

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -88 Isaac Asimov’s novel is a classic of the sci-fi detective genre, and the first in a series. Elijah Baley, a New York detective, isn’t very fond of the wealthy Spacers who left Earth behind. When one is murdered, however, Elijah is sent into space to solve the crime and assigned a partner – who turns out to be an android with the face of the murder victim and the ability to detect human emotions. It’s not exactly the easiest working conditions for Baley.

Marid Audrian from opens in a new windowWhen Gravity Fails by George Alec Effinger

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 9 In the cyberpunk future of this novel, people can modify their brains using chips that provide anything from basic skills to full personalities. Marîd Audran has avoided enhancing himself, priding himself on his independence, but after being hired by the shadowy overlord of the city where Audrian lives, that independence is at risk. Then there’s the killer he’s hired to catch, who seems to be modifying himself to embody figures like a murderous James Bond or infamous serial killer Jack the Ripper.

Tyador Borlú from opens in a new windowThe City & the City by China Miéville

opens in a new window The cities of Besźel and Ul Qoma occupy the same geographic space, but they’re perceived as two separate cities, separated largely by the will of their citizens. Tyador Borlú’s investigation into a seemingly routine murder of a student uncovers a nationalist plot that aims to destroy the balance between the two cities, with potentially disastrous consequences.

Mack Megaton from opens in a new windowThe Automatic Detective by A. Lee Martinez

opens in a new window Mack Megaton was designed to be a machine of war, but he’s finished with all that, and just trying to make a living as a detective. All he wants to do is demonstrate that he’s not just good for crushing tanks, but things just aren’t that easy. They only get harder when Mack’s neighbors are kidnapped, sending him deep into the underbelly of Empire City and into the path of a conspiracy that runs all the way to the top.

Rick Deckard from opens in a new windowDo Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? By Philip K. Dick

opens in a new window The book that inspired Blade Runner follows the bounty hunter Rick Deckard
as he attempts to find and “retire” rogue androids that look and act just like ordinary human beings. All he wants is enough money to replace his imitation electric sheep with a real, live, animal. The trouble is: how do you distinguish an extremely advanced robot from a human being? And the further Deckard goes, the more he has to wonder how much of a difference there really is – an existential question that makes his job a lot more difficult.

Image courtesy of Warner Bros. 

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Throwback Thursdays: Great Books You May have Missed

Welcome to Throwback Thursdays on the Tor/Forge blog! Every other week, we’re delving into our newsletter archives and sharing some of our favorite posts.

It’s a new year, and a lot of us are making new reading resolutions. Mine is to finally read those books I’ve been meaning to read for years now. In February of 2010, senior editor Melissa Ann Singer had the same thought. Here’s her look back at some wonderful books you may have missed. We hope you enjoy this blast from the past, and be sure to check back every other Thursday for more!

The Many Deaths of the Black Company by Glen Cook Science Fiction Hall of Fame edited by Robert Silverberg The Man Whose Teeth Were Really Exactly Alike by Philip K. Dick The World Inside by Robert Silverberg

Great Books You May have Missed

By Melissa Ann Singer, Senior Editor

It’s a sad truth that books are, at least at this point in the space-time continuum, ephemeral. Oh, sure, there are sellers of used books; and there are collectors who hold onto their copies forever; and there’s the brave, newish worlds of POD and epublication, which might ensure that nothing ever goes out of print…but there will still be the problem of letting people know about cool, interesting, enjoyable books that were published before (as in before now).

We’ve made it something of a cottage industry here, with the Orb list dedicated to restoring to print, or keeping in print, classic works of fantasy and science fiction; and with the Tor trade paperback list, which has become a good place to find new editions of books you may not have noticed the first time they came around.

The first few months of 2010 are a perfect illustration of our regard for “older” books.

In January 2010, we published The Many Deaths of the Black Company by Glen Cook, one in a series of omnibus editions of Glen Cook’s stellar military fantasy series, The Black Company. The Many Deaths of the Black Company contains two Black Company novels, Water Sleeps and Soldiers Live.

Hawkmoon: The Jewel in the Skull by Michael MoorcockThat same month also saw the release of Hawkmoon: The Jewel in the Skull by Michael Moorcock—the first of several Hawkmoon volumes we’ll publish in the next two years. I’m a huge Moorcock fan myself and I was very excited to see these books on our list—my old mass market editions are too fragile to read. Moorcock’s tales of the multiverse and the neverending battle between Order and Chaos are a kind of flamboyant fantasy that just sings when done right…and Moorcock is a master of it.

In February, we have a pair of blockbuster anthologies. In Orb, The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume Two B. I know, it’s a mouthful, and not the most attractive title you’ve ever seen. Xanth by Two by Piers AnthonyThe Science Fiction Hall of Fame honors great short sf&f fiction published before the Nebula Awards were invented; Volume One contained short stories and Volume Two A and Volume Two B contain classic novellas. All three are big fat collections well worth reading. On the fantasy side of things, we are re-presenting Legends, a doorstop of a collection of fantasy novellas by modern writers. And on a lighter note, we’re publishing a Xanth omnibus, Xanth by Two, containing Demons Don’t Dream and Harpy Thyme.

March will see the Orb edition of Robert Silverberg’s The World Inside, a classic look at overpopulation by one of sf’s most thoughtful writers, as well as a trade paperback edition of Philip K. Dick’s The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike, part of our ongoing program of restoring lost or little-known PKD books to print.

The Point Man by Steve EnglehartAlso slated for March is The Point Man by Steve Englehart. While Englehart is perhaps best known as a comic book writer, The Point Man demonstrated he was a stellar wordsmith in any form. After a long hiatus, Englehart has returned to writing novels, and The Long Man, a follow-up to The Point Man, will also be released in March.

Throughout the year, Tor strives to offer you the best in fantasy and science fiction, old and new. Though I’m a long-term fan, I’ve run into more than one previously unknown—to me—gem on our reissue lists. I know you will too.

This article is originally from the February 2010 Tor/Forge newsletter. Sign up for the Tor/Forge newsletter now, and get similar content in your inbox twice a month!

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Reprint Roundup

By Stacy Hague-Hill

Tor is well-known for publishing original and high-quality genre novels, but we also reprint classics of the field. January and February include several of our old favorites.

Placeholder of  -78January saw the release of Puttering About in a Small Land by Philip K. Dick, in trade paperback. In the 1950s, Dick wrote several novels outside of genre, which have been re-released by Tor in all-new hardcover and trade paperback editions. Puttering About in a Small Land is a realistic novel filled with details of everyday life and skillfully told from three points of view, all featuring the emotional intensity and the finely-observed characterizations are a hallmark of Philip K. Dick’s work.

Image Placeholder of - 14In 1991, Michael Swanwick won the Nebula Award for Best Novel for Stations of the Tide, which is now available in a new trade paperback edition from Orb. Stations of the Tide is a masterwork of radically altered realities and world-shattering seductions. If you haven’t read Swanwick yet, this is a great place to start.

Poster Placeholder of - 50Available this February is Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott, winner of the 1995 Lambda Award for best SF novel. This one harkens back to the early days of cyberpunk, when the internet was imagined as a lawless frontier and hackers had powers akin to those of magicians.

Image Place holder  of - 55Then we have the final book in our newly repackaged reprints of the classic Philip Jose Farmer Riverworld series: Gods of Riverworld. The Riverworld books are some of Farmer’s most famous works, and the series hit the New York Times bestseller list on initial publication. It’s easy to see why—in what other books can you travel on an old riverboat with Samuel Clemens? Explore a strange new land in the company of Sir Richard Burton? The characters in Riverworld are drawn from all of human history, so the possibilities are endless. And with five books in the series, imagine all the people you could meet!

Place holder  of - 50Finally, we have a classic of horror, now back in print after nearly a decade: Legion, a novel of breathtaking energy and suspense by William Peter Blatty, author of the mega-bestseller and basis for the blockbuster film The Exorcist. Legion has everything fans of the genre love: strange ritualistic murders, an intriguingly creepy cast of characters, and a hero you can root (and fear) for.

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From the Tor/Forge February newsletter. Sign up to receive our newsletter via email.

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