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Works by Bradley W. Schenck

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StarShipSofa Stories Volume 3 — Illustrator — 4 copies

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This book is another in the recently growing trend to update and display the adventuresome glories of the SF of yesteryear!

... and I have to admit that it's a rather fun ride. :)

Dash!

Where else can you find a hero's name quite so dashing? And then there are the funny bits.. and there are quite a few funny bits. I personally LOVED the world's smallest Giant Robot. He not only grew on me, but he became a very cool and well-rounded character in his own right. :)

But mostly, this is all a straight adventure that takes us to through Spider Gods and massive robot slave empires and a perfectly reasonable main plot mystery revolving the lost jobs of the switchboard women who I could almost see wearing hairnets and be being totally 1930's prim.

But most of all, there is a lot of love for all the classic adventures and the time period, the optimism, the sheer delight of funny and sometimes really fascinating personal tech, the excitement and thrill of getting your ear blown off, the sting of rejection letters sent from fiction editors.

Not only is our intrepid hero a dashing private-eye-ish adventure hero, but he also writes. :) Gotta love it. :)

RETROPOLIS! :)

What can I say? I had fun. Very cool SF/mystery mashup that updates the tech but brings us right back into a more hopeful SF time.

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bradleyhorner | 8 other reviews | Jun 1, 2020 |
This is fun. If you like old school science fiction, you'll love this. It is not pure science fiction; it contains elements of steampunk and even a little urban fantasy as well. It even has an interesting ethical question about the treatment of self aware robots, but don't worry it is all ultimately fun. It is a 5 star fun ride that maybe could have been a little deeper and not lost the fun. Well worth the read.
 
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Skybalon | 8 other reviews | Mar 19, 2020 |
A blurb by Allan Steele says this book is "Funny and Action-Packed." I couldn't disagree more. The book barely rises to the level of amusing. As for action, the book just plods along. I like Mr. Schenck's Metropolis website, but I will not waste any more time on his books set in that futuristic world.
 
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rgurskey | 8 other reviews | Apr 8, 2019 |
Retropolis is a city of the future as imagined in the first part of the 20th century. Robots walk the streets and work in many jobs that require physical abilities and machine precision that humans don't have. They're intelligent, and while they start out as indentured workers, they earn their full freedom over time, and have formed a pretty powerful union.

Meanwhile, humans do other work. Everyone relies on InfoSlates, which are a lot like our phones, except perhaps standardized more at the size of an iPad. That's my impression of them, anyway. Another difference between InfoSlates and either iPads or phones is that they rely on human switchboard operators.

Nola Gardner is a switchboard operator, and she and her sister operators (remember, think 1930s rather than present day) abruptly find themselves out of jobs after a surprise efficiency review. What they can't seem to find out is who replaced them.

Rusty is one of the aforementioned intelligent robots, who on his way home from work one day finds a female robot with no legs lying in the street. She doesn't seem to talk, which is awkward, but he takes her back to his apartment, determined to find out where she belongs.

Nola persuades her coworkers to pool their severance pay and hire adventurer Dash Kent, who is also a plumber who lives in Rusty's building. He's got a great track record rescuing cats from the temple of a weird cult on Mars...

Soon an unexpected and unlikely group have formed to fight an unseen, devious enemy.

Rocket cars! Private rocket ships! Robots! Evil industrialists!

And all that is before the world's tiniest giant robot shows up and starts wreaking havoc.

Schenck camptures this retro future perfectly. It's goofy, it's exciting, it's joyful.

Don't go looking for science-fictional plausibility here; that would be missing the point. This is an adventure in the 1939 World's Fair's future, not ours, and it's a lot of fun.

Highly recommended.

I received an advance reader's copy of this book, and am reviewing it voluntarily.
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LisCarey | 8 other reviews | Sep 19, 2018 |

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