Notes from Small Planets: 2020’s Essential Travel Guide to the Worlds of Science Fiction and Fantasy! The ONLY Travel Guide You’ll Need This Year!

Notes from Small Planets: 2020’s Essential Travel Guide to the Worlds of Science Fiction and Fantasy! The ONLY Travel Guide You’ll Need This Year!

Hardcover
2.01

Durch das Verwenden dieser Links unterstützt du READO. Wir erhalten eine Vermittlungsprovision, ohne dass dir zusätzliche Kosten entstehen.

Beschreibung

Journey from fantasy mountains to super-cities, through piratical seas and up into space without missing any must-see sights – or putting a foot wrong with the locals! Whether you’re Lord of the shoestring-budget or Luxe Skywalker – Notes from Small Planets is your pastiche passport through the best worlds of Science Fiction and Fantasy.

Your ultimate travel guide to all the must-see locations in the worlds of Science Fiction and Fantasy.

The perfect gift for self-professed geeks and fans of all things genre – from classic genre listeners to new young disciples of nerdery. From misty mountains to wizarding schools, from the homes of superheroes to lairs of infamous villains – visit your favourite worlds and discover new ones – all without ever missing a single landmark or traditional dish. What’s orc for ‘bon voyage’?
Haupt-Genre
N/A
Sub-Genre
N/A
Format
Hardcover
Seitenzahl
256
Preis
10.80 €

Beiträge

1
Alle
2

Sometimes funny and imaginative, this travel guide also becomes repetitive in time. And most of the humour to be found in the commentary, is on the same level as Barry Trotter and other teen-ish parodies. So while the worldbuilding itself is interesting, the commentary (except for the editor's footnotes) isn't. One should have used the editor as author. The short takes on misogyny, racism, 'history is created by the victorious party', human tendencies to devalue anything they don't understand,... are really something and should have been expanded. Though I guess, with the author (the one inside the book, not Mr. Crowley) being a fully grown jerk, and biased as hell, this book follows the tradition of most major works of SF/F (and might at the same time be a commentary on a number of fans). So while it was annoying to me, this might have been a well-considered way to make a point, too.

Beitrag erstellen