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The 13 Crimes of Science Fiction
The 13 Crimes of Science Fiction
Author: Isaac Asimov (editor), Martin Harry Greenberg (editor), Charles G, Waugh (editor)
Thirteen tales in which detectives of the distant future roam a galaxy riddled with locked-room mysteries, ciphers to be decoded, and unearthly evidence to be sifted, all by the rules of the 13 classic kinds of mystery story.
ISBN: 468849
Publication Date: 1979
Pages: 455
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Publisher: Doubleday & Company, Inc.
Book Type: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
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reviewed The 13 Crimes of Science Fiction on + 3 more book reviews
This is a neat collection of sci fi stories. There is one from each of thirteen categories of crime story, whodunit, police procedural, etc. Some are excellent, some are just pretty good, but with a one page Asimov introduction to each and juxtaposed in this way, it's fun to read and makes you think about the varieties of crime drama and their relationship to science fiction, but since these are older stories you start thinking about how sci fi has changed and how crime stories have and have not changed. If you like classic sci fi this also gives you a chance to sample thirteen authors with short pieces. There are two or three I plan to seek out here on PBS and at the library.

I read this book book a couple times as a kid in the '70s; I reacquired it through PBS (thanks, PBS!) and read it again, and re-reading something after thirty years is always revealing.


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