Synopses & Reviews
A dark and gritty trip into the imagination of one of science fiction's most gifted authors, this collection presents all nine tales of the Budayeen gathered together in one archival-quality volume, available for the first time in more than 20 years. Here is the Budayeen: a gritty fusion of Bogart's Casablanca, New Orleans' notoriously seedy French Quarter, and a futuristic Muslim city, all welded together and serving as the perfect backdrop for Marid, a drug-addled policeman and anti-hero of world-class proportion. This is a collection to get lost in, from the city's sordid underbelly to the glamorous excesses of the "sex moddy" industry, from the tall, ancient mosque towers to the strong-voiced muezzin calling the faithful to morning devotions, the Budayeen leaps to sudden life, making claims to its own reality as only the best science fiction can.
Synopsis
George Alex Effinger's first short-fiction collection in nearly 15 years, these nine tales are set in Budayeen, the walled city in the sand, a city of dark shadows and even darker inhabitants, where a Raymond Chandleresque vision has been created--hardboiled, noir, futuristic--but with a twist. The sights, smells, and denizens of Budayeen are brought to life--from the city's sordid, decadent underbelly to the glamorous excesses of the sex industry. This collection includes four tales of Marid Audran, the protagonist in Effinger's three highly acclaimed Budayeen novels. Also included is Effinger's best-known story, Schrodinger's Kitten, in which a young girl's dreams portend myriad possible quantum futures, all focused on her encounter with a would-be rapist.
About the Author
George Alec Effinger contributed regularly to the top science fiction and fantasy magazines including New Dimensions, Orbit, and Universe. His novelette Schrödinger's Kitten won the Hugo, Japanese Seiun, Nebula, and Theodore Sturgeon Memorial awards. He published several novels including The Exile Kiss, A Fire in the Sun, What Entropy Means to Me, and When Gravity Fails.