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El gran secreto: An Intergalactic Tale of Madness, Obsession, and Startling Revelations
No disponible
El gran secreto: An Intergalactic Tale of Madness, Obsession, and Startling Revelations
No disponible
El gran secreto: An Intergalactic Tale of Madness, Obsession, and Startling Revelations
Libro electrónico123 páginas1 hora

El gran secreto: An Intergalactic Tale of Madness, Obsession, and Startling Revelations

Calificación: 3.5 de 5 estrellas

3.5/5

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Información de este libro electrónico

Fanner Marston está a punto de descubrir la clave para conseguir el control absoluto del universo. El único problema es que está loco de atar: un enloquecido Anthony Quinn con muchos humos. Impulsado por la avaricia y el ansia de poder, lo único que le preocupa es llegar a la antigua ciudad de Parva y encontrar el gran secreto del poder absoluto. Pero está escrito en los muros de Parva… y no creerán lo que dice.
IdiomaEspañol
EditorialGalaxy Press
Fecha de lanzamiento15 sept 2013
ISBN9781619862326
No disponible
El gran secreto: An Intergalactic Tale of Madness, Obsession, and Startling Revelations

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Calificación: 3.3846176923076925 de 5 estrellas
3.5/5

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  • Calificación: 3 de 5 estrellas
    3/5
    Meh. Very few stories and none of them really floated my boat.
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    First Impressions:

    Behind a veil of science fiction trappings come four stories from pulp fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard, a collection of shorts that originally appeared in various magazines of the 1930s and 1940s, when kids during the Great Depression and WWII took some comfort in these fanciful stories.

    I've collected or read these kinds of stories for some time now, and found that both Hubbard's and Heinlein's stories teach us lessons of the human condition, each with its own themes of redemption or honor -- or in some cases defeat!

    What's In Here?

    « The title story The Great Secret was not super exciting but did give a lot of description of one Fanner Marsten, an amoral thief and adventurer, who apparently has killed for the honor of discovering a lost city on a distant planet. Dying of hunger and thirst, he treks cross desert wastes and finds the ancient city. The city with the great secret.

    « The "great secret" is on a huge poster, cut into metal. What it says was quite a surprised to me. And to a greedy bastard like Marsten!


    Cute video of the first story, interviewing the main character. Liquor! Women! Power! LOL!

    « The second story dealt with a skirmish in a war between Saturn and Earth. Clearly a juvenile story, a captain with a love for his vessel, his pride for it, his grief for the loss of it, and his eventual redemption was interesting, but is the weakest of the four stories. Who the enemy was, why the war, and so on is not covered. What's covered is personality and grit and determination.

    « The third story I enjoyed the most of all: The Beast! A cocky hunter on Venus, aka the great white hunter (the natives call him), yet he runs into an impossible animal that fights him at every turn, beats him mercilessly and he barely escapes. The natives stop worshipping him and stop following his commands, as the beast kills men, women and children of the village. Here's a story of what courage is based, and that courage is not based on cocky over-confidence. Interesting twist ending I didn't see coming.

    « The last tale is about a subjugated Earth called 'Slaver.' A slave ship lands on Earth and collects many men, women and children -- and an elite man by the name of Kree Lorin. As in the other story, he too was arrogant, proud and self-assured -- and stepping his heel on the lower classes -- until captured by the slaver and found out what it was like to be beaten and ground into the nearest slave hole! Hubbard could have easily made this into a novelette -- such potential at the end to continue Kree's adventure. I was disappointed when it was done.

    Throughout these four stories are the themes of overconfidence, fear of losing and eventual or potential salvation of the protagonists.

    The stories are typical pulp -- not heavy drawn-out plots, no complex characterization. Great for a quick tale while waiting for a bus or having some time to kill at a doctor's office.

    Galaxy Press has reprinted dozens of these -- I'd take advantage.

    Other Galaxy Press Books:

    The Professor Was a Thief (Stories from the Golden Age)
    The Iron Duke (Stories from the Golden Age)

    And the Writers of the Future anthology series:

    L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future, Vol. 22