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Santiago by Mike Resnick
Santiago by Mike Resnick




At first glance, this looks like a collection of short stories, but the individual stories clearly exist only to form a bigger picture. The book is structured into 26 chapters, each of which forms a complete story, with no characters shared between chapters. Somehow, despite whatever enabled humans to achieve total power, they were unable to keep it.ĭisplaying a particular brand of irony, one of the chapters reveals the "literary genre of fiction" as another of humanity's peculiarities, not shared by any alien race. Then, after there is no more room for conquest, the only way left is down: internal struggles as well as deep-seated resentment of aliens result in a decline of human power that takes nearly as long as the rise, but is described far less extensively. It is never clearly defined but manifests perhaps most succinctly when it also results in the failure of an attempt to cross the void between galaxies. But the biggest theme is undeniably the search for the elusive quality that allows humanity to overcome all opposition and manage the unique feat of conquering the entire galaxy. Not all chapters deal with humanity's treatment of aliens some also cover the "internal" politics that result in a development of the growing human empire from a democracy to a monarchy.

Santiago by Mike Resnick

In between, it chronicles a slow but (despite some set-backs) steady conquest of the entire galaxy - inhabited by thousands of sentient alien races, which are overpowered and oppressed using whatever tool it takes: economic pressure, diplomatic finesse, or simple military power.

Santiago by Mike Resnick

It describes the fictional history of humanity's conquest of the galaxy that serves as environment for a number of the author's other novels.īirthright spans a timeline of nearly 17 millennia, beginning at a very early stage of expansion from Earth and ending with the death of the last humans. Birthright: The Book of Man is a science fiction novel (or a novel-like series of vignettes) written by Mike Resnick, published in 1982.






Santiago by Mike Resnick