Date: Fri, 10 Sep 2004 12:24:31 -0700
From: Sam Pierce <scpierce at gmail.com>
To: WSFA members <wsfalist at wsfa.org>
Subject: [WSFA] Re: Title: The World Turned Upside Down
Reply-To: WSFA members <WSFAlist at WSFA.org>

You mean they stand up well because... <gasp>  they've been rewritten?

       Say it ain't so.

Just shows how a reputation is a precious thing.

On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 14:28:25 -0400, Michael Walsh <mjw at press.jhu.edu> wrote:
> > elilley at mindspring.com 9/10/04 2:15:05 PM >>>
> >Dear WSFAns,
> >
> >I just got a galley in from Baen with a collection of stories from
> >the
> >40s and 50s which share a twisted point of view. Is anyone
> >out there
> >interested in doing a review? It won't be due for a while, as
> >the book
> >comes out in Jan. Of course, you're welcome to submit it to
> >the WSFA
> >journal as well.
> >
> >Ern
> >
> >Title: The World Turned Upside Down
> >Author: Eric Flint
> >Reviewer: Issue: Status: 04 RECD
> >
> >ISBN: 0743498747 Publisher: Baen Media: Hardcover Galley:
> >y ListPrice:
> >$24.00
> >Release Date: 01 January, 2005 Contact: Marla Ainspan
> >
> >Short Review: One of the hallmarks of Golden Age short
> >stories was the
> >surprise ending, the point at which the reader's world turns
> >upside
> >down. Even today, it's a neat trick to play on your readers.
> >The
> >editorial team of Drake, Baen and Flint have brought together
> >34 of the
> >best such stories from the best writers the Golden Age had to
> >offer:
>
> The more cynical might wonder how much of the book *r*c Fl*nt has
> "edited" . . .
>
> mjw
>
> "You may think that, I couldn't possibly comment." - -  Francis
> Urquhart, from "House of Cards"
>