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Goodbye, Godzilla
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16134 |
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BOOK WORLD
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6 / 1989 |
2,916 Words |
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Robert F. Geary Robert F. Geary is head of the English Department at James
Madison University. His academic interests include the gothic
novel and its literary descendants. |
THE BEST JAPANESE SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
John L. Apostolou and Martin Greenberg, eds.
New York: Dembner Books, 1989
176 pp., $16.95
Americans, it seems fair to say, are intimately familiar with the technological products of Japan but far less aware of Japanese culture. We drive Japanese-made automobiles, watch movies on Japanese VCRs, and listen to our music on Japanese stereo systems; but we read comparatively few books about Japan and fewer still by Japanese authors. The commerce in goods is, understandably, much more rapid than the commerce in ideas and cultural codes. The entire world is familiar with American products (soft drinks and jeans, if not electronic equipment), but our literature, history, and values export less readily.
The situation is, quite naturally, changing. Film buffs are likely to know the work of Japanese directors. American businessmen study Japanese management models, and educators here look (perhaps with envy) at an educational system that works. More slowly, Japanese literature is being translated for the American reading public. Though Japan has had a long tradition of science-fiction writing, a tradition energized after World War II by increased contact with Western science-fiction, The Best Japanese Science Fiction Stories is the first anthology to appear in English. It is overdue and to be welcomed. The collection shows that Japanese writers have mastered the genre's potential for creating fiction at once entertaining and insightful. One hopes that the book will find a paperback publisher; its thirteen entrancing selections by ten different authors deserve the
... (1997 of 17546 Characters)
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