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Light from a Lone Star by  Jack Vance - Signed First Edition - 1985 - from North American Rarities and Biblio.com
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Light from a Lone Star

by Vance, Jack

Limited Edition First Printing


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Price: $200.00

  • Bookseller: North American Rarities US (US)
  • Bookseller Inventory #: 16216
  • Format/binding: Hardcover
  • Book condition: Near Fine in Near Fine dust jacket
  • Edition: Limited Edition First Printing
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • ISBN 10: 0915368315
  • ISBN 13: 9780915368310
  • Publisher: Nesfa Pr
  • Date published: 1985
  • Keywords: United States, World Literature, Literature & Fiction, Books
  • Subjects: FICTION / Science Fiction / General;

Book Description

Nesfa Pr. Near Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. 1985. Limited Edition First Printing. Hardcover. Crisp clean DJ in mylar cover. There is a rub line on the rear panel of the DJ, from opening book. Book is fresh and clean with solid hinges, solid binding. Clean text-block. 24mo 5" - 6" tall 125 pages This printing was limited to a total production of 1000 pieces, 200 of which were signed, numbered, slipcase editions. This book is one of the 800 limited edition copies. This is a far-too-brief collection of rarely seen early works from science fiction master Jack Vance. "The Men Return" is a bizarre sortie into a world from which causality has departed and no cause is followed by a predictable effect. Man as a thinking creature is helpless in this environment, and the world is best suited for those beings who can somehow intuit the appropriate action. Vance tries to show (with limited success) that logic is only one way of dealing with the universe, and it may not always be the best way. Unfortunately, the idea of a world governed by no natural laws at all is so ethereal that even Vance can't really bring it off; instead we get only the helplessness and desperation of creatures who are about to die. "Hard Luck Diggings" shows sci-fi detective Magnus Ridolph finding out who is killing the workers on a distant planet. "First Star I See Tonight" covers the murder mystery from the other direction, as an unscrupulous astronomer finds a short cut to advancing his career. Neither of these stories are particularly memorable, although "Star", with its unexpected ending is probably the better of the two. A little more wildly imaginative is "The Potters of Firsk" wherein the urn-makers on a distant planet use human bones for their pottery until a desperate bureaucrat teaches them the secret of yellow glaze. "Noise" is a very strange, almost poetic piece about a man marooned alone on an unknown planet who comes to doubt his own sanity. Is his colorful world of faerie life forms real, or a product of his overstressed mind? .

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