As NASA’s Curiosity rover trundles about the surface of Mars today, another page turns on the glories of pulp science fiction. Leigh Brackett’s vision of a land populated with humans and aliens, ancient cities and creatures, long-buried secrets and mysterious deserts fades a shade closer to pale as one desolate desert image after another is beamed back to Earth. But there was a day when her works shone with the hope and possibility of life on the planets beyond Earth. Gollancz bringing together the best of these stories in one collection, Fantasy Masterwork’s Sea Kings of Mars and Otherworldly Stories is the imaginatively nostalgic look back to a time when the solar system held more possibilities.
The
collection contains five novelettes, five novellas, one short story, and one
novel. Though organized chronologically
by publishing date, little actually links the stories. A few are set on Venus and a handful feature
the character Eric John Stark, but the majority are the plights and travails,
adventures and journeys of various men and women across the ancient Martian
landscape. All manner of the vividly
fantastic and anachronistically technical emerging in their tales, the
collection is by default science fantasy, but certainly the motifs and mindset
of pulp fantasy fill the book’s cup.


