Immagine dell'autore.

Lee Correy (1928–1997)

Autore di The Abode of Life

62+ opere 1,988 membri 14 recensioni

Sull'Autore

G. Harry Stine was born March 26, 1928. He graduated with a degree in physics from Colorado College. He worked as a civilian scientist at White Sands Proving Grounds and then at the U.S. Naval Ordnance Missile Test Facility as head of the Range Operations Division from 1955-1957. He was a founder mostra altro of the American Model Rocketry Association and many of his pioneering rockets are displayed in the Smithsonian's Air and Space Museum. He wrote science fiction using the pseudonym Lee Correy. His works included Starship Through Space, Rocket Man, Contraband Rocket, Shuttle Down, Space Doctor, Manna, A Matter of Metalaw, and in the Star Trek series The Abode of Life. Writing under G. Harry Stine, his works included Warbots, Judgment Day, and Starsea Invaders: First Action. He died of a stroke on November 2, 1997. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno
Nota di disambiguazione:

(eng) Actual name George Harry Stine. Wrote as Lee Correy, G. Harry Stine.

Serie

Opere di Lee Correy

The Abode of Life (1982) 567 copie
Handbook of Model Rocketry (1970) 151 copie
Space Doctor (1981) 143 copie
Shuttle Down (1981) 93 copie
Star Driver (1656) 67 copie
Manna (1984) 65 copie
A Matter of Metalaw (1986) 64 copie
Warbots (1988) 54 copie
The Space Enterprise (1980) 45 copie
First Action (1993) 45 copie
Second Contact (1994) 27 copie
Living in Space (1997) 25 copie
Third Encounter (1995) 23 copie
Space Power (1981) 21 copie
The Silicon Gods (1984) 8 copie
Contraband rocket (1956) 6 copie
Confrontation in Space (1966) 6 copie
La morada de la vida (1994) 5 copie
Starship through space (1954) 5 copie
The Hopeful Future (1983) 5 copie
The Corporate Survivors (1986) 3 copie
Benu ** 1 copia
A mozgató gondolat (1992) 1 copia

Opere correlate

Analog: The Best of Science Fiction (1982) — Autore — 128 copie
6th Annual Edition: The Year's Best S-F (1961) — Collaboratore — 124 copie
Thor's Hammer (1979) — Collaboratore — 92 copie
The expert dreamers (1962) — Collaboratore — 77 copie
Orion's Sword (1980) — Collaboratore — 70 copie
Astounding Science Fiction 1955 02 (1955) — Collaboratore — 13 copie
Astounding Science Fiction 1953 06 (1953) — Collaboratore — 12 copie
The Analog Science Fact Reader (1974) — Collaboratore — 10 copie
Astounding/Analog Science Fact & Fiction 1960 04 (1960) — Collaboratore — 10 copie
Open Space no. 1 (1989) — Collaboratore — 9 copie
Fantastic Universe May 1959 (1959) — Collaboratore — 6 copie
Fantastic. No. 034 (August 1957) (1957) — Collaboratore — 3 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome legale
Stine, George Harry
Altri nomi
Stine, G. Harry
Stine, G. H.
Data di nascita
1928-03-26
Data di morte
1997-11-02
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Luogo di morte
Phoenix, Arizona, USA
Luogo di residenza
Phoenix, Arizona, USA
Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA
Istruzione
Colorado College
Attività lavorative
science fiction writer
science writer
Organizzazioni
National Association of Rocketry (founder)
Nota di disambiguazione
Actual name George Harry Stine. Wrote as Lee Correy, G. Harry Stine.

Utenti

Recensioni

Mercan es un planeta cerrado en si mismo. Sus habitantes no saben de la existencia de un mundo exterior y han aprendido a convivir con las periódicas explosiones radioctivas de su sol. Una de éstas va a producirse justamente cuando la Enterprise, averiada, aterriza en Mercan. Kirk y su tripulación se deberán enfrentar, no sólo a la incredulidad hostil de los mercanianos, sino también a una disyuntiva moral:
¿Deben destruir el sol para salvar la nave? ¿o permitir que los mercanianos sigan viviendo en el único mundo que conocen?… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Natt90 | Jan 13, 2023 |
Somewhat interesting in that it plays with the idea of a 'lost colony.' It seems another version of the "World Is Hollow And I Have Touched The Sky" idea, but this time with an actual world, not a generationship. Not very compelling, however, in the end - I felt like the Mercans needed more development for me to truly care about their curious society.
 
Segnalato
everystartrek | 6 altre recensioni | Jan 5, 2023 |
Part of the fun for me in reading Ace Doubles is the pleasure of sampling science fiction written by people who had different perspectives and views from those of writers today. This is most obvious in the plot-driven nature of the novels, in which character development takes a back seat (if not escorted out of the room altogether) in favor of the premise and the resulting action. It's also interesting to read them as artifacts reflecting the concerns of their times, which may seem dated and quaint to us today but were very real to them. In that respect their very datedness can make them worthwhile reading.

This datedness emerges in ways that are not as quaint or appealing, however, as most of these novels about the future embody the social attitudes of the authors' time. This was especially evident in the latest pair I read, which offered two very different adventures. The first one was G. Harry Stine's Contraband Rocket. Published under Stine's pseudonym "Lee Corey"), it's about a group of near-future rocket enthusiasts who decide to refurbish a decommissioned rocket and travel to the moon. As a rocket engineer who played a major role in model rocketry, Stine's novel captures well the passion of a group of enthusiasts for the dream of flying in space and makes for interesting for this reason alone. Yet Stine's subplot, in which the wife of one of the central characters leaves him over his obsession with the project, absolutely grates today. What could have added a sense of emotional drama becomes instead a vehicle for taking some Scientology-esque digs at psychiatry (in Stine's future, divorce proceedings are a pretense for court-mandated brainwashing) culminating n an end in which the wife realizes that it's really her problem and not his. Once again, the Fifties-era patriarchy emerges triumphant.

Ironically, the issue of datedness was less evident in the other novel, even though it was the older of the two works. Murray Leinster's The Forgotten Planet was a fix-up of three short stories two of which were written in the early 1920s. In it a terraforming project is unintentionally abandoned midway through its centuries-long process due to a lost record, leaving a planet seeded by Terran plants and insects that without the presence of other animals grow unchecked. After a space liner crashes on the planet, the savage descendants of its survivors must cope with swarms of foot-long ants, wasps the size of sofas, and spiders that would barely fit comfortably in a garage. Like the writers of the "big-bug" movies of the 1950s Leinster glosses over the impossibility of insect physiology at that size, preferring to focus on his tale of a human (male, of course), who gradually rediscovers the value of tools and leads his tribe to survival. It's a gripping adventure (if a bit monotonous) but it ends with a casual embrace of hunting that is increasing at odds with our ethical development today. Like Stine Leinster is reflecting the attitudes of his class and time, but it's still jarring to see supposedly advanced humans embrace the slaughtering of unique species so eagerly.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
MacDad | 1 altra recensione | Mar 27, 2020 |

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Statistiche

Opere
62
Opere correlate
21
Utenti
1,988
Popolarità
#12,938
Voto
½ 3.4
Recensioni
14
ISBN
76
Lingue
4

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