Man Who Melted

Something Old, Something New

The Not Free SF Reader chimes in with some thoughts on my anthology, Fast Forward 1: Future Fiction from the Cutting Edge.They “definitely” recommend the book, and say “The stories are good, the average rating being 3.53, which is a bit over what you hope for from a book, and is rather well done in a new original project as opposed to some sort of reprint… it is a book that is well worth looking at.”

Meanwhile, Michael Swanwick reprints an essay he originally ran in the NYRSF called “A Nettlesome Term That Has Outlived its Welcome.” The essay is about the way the term “fix-up”, originally created to mean a novel assembled out of previously published material and which covers some of the greatest works in the field (as in Ray Bradbury’s Martian Chronicles, for example) is now perhaps a derogatory term that does more harm than good. Along the way, he discusses Jack Dann’s marvelous The Man Who Melted,a novel which “didn’t make it big, the way later Dann novels such as The Memory Cathedral and The Silent would. It was much too intensely personal for that. But it’s one of those neglected books that nevertheless contain a great deal to interest the intelligent reader.”

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Dann the Man

Kilian Melloy reviews Jack Dann’s The Man Who Melted for the Edge, Boston. Speaking about the novel, Kilian says: “Dann has packed so many surprises into his novel that by the end, the reader feels whole new colors on the spectrum of motive and emotion have been revealed…. This complex, mutli-layered novel engages you twice: first, searingly, as you read it and then, later and more profoundly, as you replay its subtle warnings and prognostications. …Dann’s novel requires that you look, then look again, to appreciate everything he’s put into its creation.”

Meanwhile, be sure to check out this interview with Jack Dann which Kilian conducted as well. In Jack Dann’s words, ” In The Man Who Melted, I was investigating in depth the very nature of amnesia. I must admit that this was a delving into self, as I’ve had my own experience with amnesia, with its effects, and so this novel was my way of working out some of my deepest feelings and fears.”

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B&N on Melty Men

The Barnes and Noble review of The Man Who Melted, courtesy of Paul Goat Allen:

“Jack Dann’s Nebula Award–nominated The Man Who Melted (1984) is one of the genre’s most underappreciated classics. Written as four interconnected short stories between 1981 and 1983, Dann’s haunting vision of a dystopic 22nd-century Earth is appropriately described by Robert Silverberg in the novel’s introduction as ‘a book like no other science fiction novel…the future as nightmare, science fiction as poetic vision.’
Equal parts social commentary, apocalyptic thriller, and dark prophecy, the novel stars Raymond Mantle, a psychologically shattered man obsessed with finding his wife (and sister) Josiane, who disappeared during the Great Scream — a large-scale outbreak of shared insanity that swept the Earth and turned millions into raging, murdering disciples of the collective conscious. Suffering from amnesia when it comes to memories of his wife, Mantle will do anything to find her — even if it means telepathically plugging into a dying Screamer’s memories. But after traveling a world gone insane in search of clues to her whereabouts, what Mantle finds at journey’s end just may be enough to trigger another — and final — Great Scream…
Since its launch in 2005, the editorial brain trust at Pyr has (among other accomplishments) reissued numerous largely overlooked genre masterworks and breathed new life into them with innovative new cover art, updated introductions, etc. Longtime science fiction fans who enjoy rediscovering truly visionary classics like Dann’s The Man Who Melted should also check out Pyr reissues of George Zebrowski’s Macrolife and Robert Silverberg’s Star of Gypsies. All three novels more than adequately support the curmudgeonly claim that they just don’t write ’em like they used to… “

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New Dreams and Melty Men

Tom Easton likes New Dreams for Old. As he writes in his column on Analog, the Reference Library, the book is:

“…a collection that amply demonstrates why Mike has been one of my favorite writers since the 1970s. He has a remarkably clean style and a huge gift for sheer story at many levels. He can be light and frothy as in his John Justin Mallory fantasies (two are here) and deeply reflective about the human condition, as in the Kirinyaga stories (one of the best, ‘For I Have Touched the Sky,’ is here). If you aren’t familiar with his work, this collection is an excellent introduction. If you are, his stories tend to be very rereadable. Buy this one, and enjoy.”

Meanwhile, I got my personal copies of Jack Dann’s The Man Who Meltedyesterday, which means they should be hitting stores soon and can already be ordered online. I’m really impressed by how good this title looks in hand. The art is by Nick Stathopoulous – first time I’ve worked with Nick – and the design by our own Jackie Cooke. I’d love to know what people think about the look, as it’s a bit of a departure from other Pyr titles, but I think it’s gorgeous.

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Melty Men – Jack Dann, William Gibson, and the Man Who Melted

The new issue of SFRevu is up, and with it, a really fascinating piece on Jack Dann’s The Man Who Melted. We’re reissuing this classic 1984 novel this month, but Ernest Lilley notes that the original four stories from which the novel sprung place its genesis as just prior to William Gibson’s landmark cyberpunk work Neuromancer(to which it lost the Nebula Award). Liley goes on to compare and contrast the two novels, with the conclusion that they were operating almost in parallel within the zeitgeist of the times. He contrast the novels’ respective protagonists thusly:

“Now, while Case is unable to access the net because his synapses have been hacked as the result of his double crossing his employers. Raymond’s plight is that he can’t remember his wife, the memory of whom was washed from his brain during the Great Scream, and outburst of psychotic humans who channel a shared reality telepathically with those around them. Ray is desperate to find his lost memories, if not his wife, and even willing to plug into a dying screamer to experience the connection with every one in that web of consciousness. Take away the mystical parts and it gets very web-like, including high tech devices to connect your mind to the web.”

Lilley praises Dann for being prescient a few times over, and concludes by saying:

“Both stories are set around singularity events, though couched in different terms. For Gibson it’s the accepted (now, anyway) notion of AIs taking things over, or vying for supremacy, while Dann’s world takes the idea of a spiritual reservoir that we can use technology to access which threatens to pull us all across it’s threshold into a state of common consciousness. When those two views were originally put forth, they may have seemed radically different, but if you consider the vast amount of thought on uploading virtual selves into cyberspace, the differences become less definite. It’s often been stated that Neuromancer laid out the template for the internet and Gibson’s work had tremendous impact on the forming of cyberspace. That’s no doubt true, but no less so than that The Man Who Melted shows us what we’ll find a the end of the information superhighway, and that the real challenge isn’t creating technology, but using it to explore our humanity.”

Meanwhile over on SF Reviews, Thomas M. Wagner takes the occassion of our Jack Dann reissue – “this company is hot and getting hotter” – to recall his memories of the original work and revisit the novel anew:

“I can only say it’s high time this little rarity had a chance to find a new audience. It isn’t for every audience. It challenges you, not by spinning a convoluted plot or trading in philosophical obscurity, but by the way it flenses the emotions from human experience and lays our most private places bare. It’s an absorbing but often painful trek into the “dark spaces” we conceal from ourselves and those we love. It’s unlike anything else in the genre. Adventurous readers hankering for incisive, character-driven literary SF will find much to admire and reflect upon.”

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Just Look At This, Will You?

For your viewing pleasure: the full cover spread for the reissue of Jack Dann’s classic novel, The Man Who Melted, coming from Pyr January 07.

This is our first time working with artist Nick Stathopoulos, but not his first time illustrating a work by Jack Dann. If you look closely there is an easter egg buried in the cover, a reference to the cover of an Australian edition of the book which Nick also painted. Trouble spotting it? Here’s a hint.

Cover design is once again by the wonderful Jacqueline Cooke. Right click to enlarge, of course. All very pretty, no?

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