"Mike Resnick - Blonde in Africa, A" - читать интересную книгу автора (Resnick Mike)A Blonde in Africa-an introduction
by Mike Resnick Africa can cast a spell that makes Merlin look like an amateur. It can grab you from half a world away, pull you to its bosom, and as you spend your last night there prior to going home you find that you miss it already. It has a way of simplifying things, of making you realize what's really important to you; and it can convince you that the very best part of yourself will remain there, waiting for you to return and redeem it. It can also drive you crazy, and break your heart again and again. It can show you beauties undreamed of, and horrors equally unimagined. It is vibrant with life, both human and animal, yet no continent presents such a constant and uncaring display of death. It is also a place of inspiration. People who would never have considered writing under other circumstances have taken years out of their lives to put their African experiences down on paper. And when a _real_ writer comes face to face with Africa, you get such masterpieces as Ruark's _Horn of the Hunter_, Hemingway's _The Green Hills of Africa_, Blixen's _Out of Africa_, Markham's Hunters get that urge, too, and have produced such memorable volumes as Lake's _Killers in Africa_ and _Hunter's Choice_, Jordan's _Elephants and Ivory_, Bell's _Karamojo Safari_, the works of Selous and Boyes and Lyell and Stigand and Percival, and many, many more. It even affects writers of category fiction. I've written 9 science fiction novels and 22 short stories set in Africa. Other science fiction writers such as George Alec Effinger, Robert Silverberg, John Crowley, and Gregory Benford have recently set stories there. Nor has it escaped the attention of mystery writers such as M. M. Kaye, Elspeth Huxley, and Karin McQuillan, and adventure writers from Edgar Rice Burroughs and H. Rider Haggard right up to Michael Crichton. What you now hold in your hands is a book by an award-winning romance and science fiction writer, who found Africa just as fascinating as all those who went before her. I know her a little better than those other writers who came under Africa's spell. I ought to: I'm her father. Laura Resnick has always been a traveler. She went to Sweden when she was 16. She majored in French and minored in Italian at Georgetown University, the better to make her way through the non- English-speaking world. By the time she was 25 she had lived in England, France, Sicily, and an Israeli _kibbutz_, and had visited close to a dozen other countries. |
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