Saturday, June 15, 2019

Dreamsongs Volume 2 (2004) by George R. R. Martin

Dreamsongs Volume 2 (2004) by George R. R. Martin:

This collection is generous and generously gifted with lengthy, illuminating essays by George R.R. Martin. Originally released in one volume, breaking it up into two volumes definitely helps with actually reading it.






  • "A Beast for Norn" (1976): The first tale of Haviland Tuf showcases his biological and ecological engineering skills thanks to the massive seedship Ark, along with his idiosyncratic personality and one of the more medieval-futuristic planets of the far-future Thousand Worlds universe. This version is the original, while that in Tuf Voyaging has been edited and expanded.
  • "Guardians"  (1981): A Haviland Tuf story that riffs on how seemingly minor changes to an alien environment lead to catastrophic consequences for the human inhabitants of a watery world. Tuf's favourite animals, cats, play a key role in this one.
  • "The Road Less Travelled" (Unproduced screenplay, Twilight Zone) (1986): A never-produced screenplay would still make a dandy TZ episode.
  • "Doorways" (Unproduced version of pilot) (1993): A different, less-expensive version of this screenplay was made into a pilot that never made it to series. This would now be familiar to viewers thanks to shows like Sliders.
  • "Shell Games" (1987): One of Martin's first heroes in the shared-universe superhero series Wild Cards was the amiable Great and Powerful Turtle. Fun stuff.
  • "From the Journal of Xavier Desmond" (1988): Compiles the linking story from Wild Cards novel Aces Abroad, focusing on the Mayor of Jokertown, the elephant-trunked Desmond.
  • "Under Siege" (1985): Time-travel story incorporates a story Martin wrote for a history class (that story appears early in Volume 1 of Dreamsongs).
  • "The Skin Trade" (1988): Award-winning novella involves a city run by werewolves and a mysterious mirror.
  • "Unsound Variations" (1982): Martin turns his college experiences with chess tournaments into an excellent time-travel story.
  • "The Glass Flower" (1986): Melancholy farewell (for now and then) to Martin's Thousand Worlds universe.
  • "The Hedge Knight" (1998): A story from the Game of Thrones universe, set roughly a generation before the events of the novel.
  • "Portraits of His Children" (1985): Somewhat metafictional horror story about the lengths some writers go for inspiration.


Overall: Excellent overview of Martin's writing from the mid-1980's to 2003, with a few dips further into the past to suit both thematic divisions and series that ended in the 1980's. Highly recommended.

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