Robert Silverberg's Many Trapdoors: Critical Essays on His Science Fiction
By (Author) Charles Elkins
By (author) Martin Greenberg
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
24th November 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
813.54
Hardback
168
In this work, the popular, prolific and important science fiction writer, Robert Silverberg is analysed by scholars and critics of the genre. Extending beyond the conventions of popular culture and pulp science fiction, the seven essayists assess Silverberg's body of work as being manifestly symptomatic of the modernist literary tradition in exploring techniques, such as irony, and themes such as the fragility of identity, utopia and dystopia, and spirituality and transcendence. Silverberg scholar Thomas Clareson contributes an overview of Silverberg's literary career from his first story, published in 1954, to the present, and the editors provide a bibliography of his fiction and selected secondary studies, referring to Clareson's definitive bibliography. The trapdoor metaphor used in the title relates to an observation by critic Russell Letson on the complexity of reading Silverberg, which he compares to an experience of one of Silverberg's characters: What seems to be a firm foundation for reality may in fact turn out to be a trapdoor.
Recommended for libraries with serious collections of science fiction.-Choice
"Recommended for libraries with serious collections of science fiction."-Choice
CHARLES L. ELKINS is Professor of English at Florida International University. His publications have appeared in many journals, including Extrapolation, Science-Fiction Studies, and Journal of Popular Culture, and he has contributed to many critical anthologies and reference books. MARTIN HARRY GREENBERG is Professor of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. Among his over 200 books are some 20 scholarly works in the science fiction field. He was co-editor, with Patrick A. McCarthy and Charles L. Elkins, of The Legacy of Olaf Stapledon (Greenwood Press, 1989).