• Preface • by Jerry Pournelle • Black Holes and Cosmic Censors • by Jerry Pournelle • He Fell Into a Dark Hole• by Jerry Pournelle • The Hole Man • by Larry Niven • Fuzzy Black Holes Have No Hair • by Jerry Pournelle • Kyrie • by Poul Anderson • Killing Vector • by Charles Sheffield • The Borderland of Sol • by Larry Niven • Pluto Is Black! • by Robert L. Forward • Fountain of Force • by George Zebrowski and Grant Carrington • Papa Schimmelhorn's Yang • by Reginald Bretnor • Gloria• by Gail Kimberly • Singularity • by Mildred Downey Broxon • Cygnus X-1 • by Peter Dillingham • The Salesman Who Fell From Grace With the Universe • by Peter Dillingham • The Nothing Spot • by Dian Girard • For the Lady of a Physicist • by Michael Bishop • The Venging • by Greg Bear • In the Beginning... • by Jerry Pournelle
Dr Jerry Eugene Pournelle was an American science fiction writer, engineer, essayist, and journalist, who contributed for many years to the computer magazine Byte, and from 1998 until his death maintained his own website and blog.
From the beginning, Pournelle's work centered around strong military themes. Several books describe the fictional mercenary infantry force known as Falkenberg's Legion. There are strong parallels between these stories and the Childe Cycle mercenary stories by Gordon R. Dickson, as well as Heinlein's Starship Troopers, although Pournelle's work takes far fewer technological leaps than either of these.
Pournelle spent years working in the aerospace industry, including at Boeing, on projects including studying heat tolerance for astronauts and their spacesuits. This side of his career also found him working on projections related to military tactics and probabilities. One report in which he had a hand became a basis for the Strategic Defense Initiative, the missile defense system proposed by President Ronald Reagan. A study he edited in 1964 involved projecting Air Force missile technology needs for 1975.
Dr. Pournelle would always tell would-be writers seeking advice that the key to becoming an author was to write — a lot.
“And finish what you write,” he added in a 2003 interview. “Don’t join a writers’ club and sit around having coffee reading pieces of your manuscript to people. Write it. Finish it.”
Pournelle served as President of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America in 1973.
A collection of short SF (between novellas and shorts), several essays and some poems about black holes and similar objects. The most memorable of them was Niven's "The Boderlands of Sol."
A pretty well done anthology of stories of black holes, with some additional content from some top scientists. I only rate it at three, because most content is older, available in several other sources, and has gotten a bit dated. Also, hard to find, as it was never reprinted or published as ebook; still, A worthwhile read if you happen across a copy.
A brilliant little gem, and, fairly rare for old hard sci-fi, rarely anachronistic. Stories from Niven and Pournelle and others, it's easy to get caught up in.
I first read this book when I was a teenager. Jerry Pournelle himself wasn't new to me but most of the other contributors were and I was impressed by the various approaches to the subject of Black Holes. Having re-read it again thirty years later I found myself still as impressed by the mix of stories and essays. You don't often get fact and fiction sitting side-by-side and I find the concept both interesting and informative. Good science fiction (as this collection is) contains as much fact as fiction, but the addition of real ideas and discussions of concepts really opened my eyes as a teenager.
Most of the pieces in the book were written in the mid to late 70s, with just one dating from 1968. Like all sci-fi of the time, it can seem a little dated with talk of tapes and such like, but the core concepts behind each story are as relevant today as they were then. Stephen Hawkins gets a mention in one of the articles, crediting him with being approaches to responsible for our notions of Black Holes and singularities.
Revisiting a book from your past can often be disappointing, our memories often coated in that ever-present rose coloured tint, but in this case, I was far from disappointed. Black Holes is a great collection and a very enjoyable read.
Authors included in this collection are Larry Niven, Poul Anderson, Charles Sheffield, Robert Forward, R Bretnor, Gail Kimberly, Grant Carrington, George Zebrowski, Mildred Downey Broxon, Dian Girard, Michael Bishop, Peter Dillinger and Greg Bear.
This book is about how stories on Black Holes. This was back before we knew much about the Black Holes and the stories are made up to be science fiction in the future. The story is about how a wife and kid got stuck in a Black Hole. The father is going to try to save them but needs help from many individuals.
I can connect to the world because it is about how researchers and their research can easily be provoked. In the book after a fictional war the science department was to not make such far advancements in reasearch or they could become weapons. Now I'm not sure if there is any restricted reaseach but we have a similar ban on Nuclear Weapons use.
I give this book a low two out of five stars. This is because the science fiction in this book didn't pop out. Nothing so out of ordinary and nothing that made it different than other books. I understand that this book was a good 50 years back, but even my Dad was bored. I suggest the Artemis Fowl series, as even that isn't science fiction but it was good fantasy.