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Consists of book reviews and essays written for The magazine of fantasy and science fiction.
A collection of poetry by award-winning journalist Jason J. Marchi. Several poems in this volume were first published in such magazines as Amazing Stories, Weird Tales, Pandora, Byline, and Verbicide during a 20 year period, and some of these poems were recognized in writing contests. A few unpublished poems are included here for the first time. This handsome trade paperback book also includes nine black & white illustrations (and a full-color cover) by noted Connecticut artist and art teacher, Noel Belton.
What makes humans bark? Is the funny bone funny? What is the algebra of comedy? Did the sitcom originate with the ape? Carlton is an android (a 4.5 Bowie Artificial Intelligence Robot) who works for Alex and Lewis, two comedians from the twenty-second century who travel the outer vaudeville circuit of the solar system known ironically as the Road to Mars. His problem is that although as a computer he cannot understand irony, he is attempting to write a thesis about comedy, its place in evolution, and whether it can ever be cured. And he is also studying the comedians of the late twentieth century (including obscure and esoteric comedy acts such as Monty Python's Flying Circus) in his search for the comedy gene. In the meantime, while auditioning for a gig on the Princess Di (a solar cruise ship), his two employers inadvertently offend the fabulous diva Brenda Woolley and become involved in a terrorist plot against Mars, the home of Showbiz. Can Carlton prevent Alex and Lewis from losing their gigs, help them overcome the love thing, and finally understand the meaning of comedy in the universe? Will a robot ever really be able to do stand-up? As Einstein might have said, nothing in the universe can travel faster than the speed of laughter. The Road to Mars was named one of the best books of 1999 by the Los Angeles Times.