![]() Among the best entries are ""Coyote Makes Trouble,"" which concerns a plot to capture one of the planet's leading revolutionaries ""Arthur Sternbach Brings the Curveball to Mars,"" about the effect of Martian gravity on America's favorite pastime and ""Sexual Dimorphism,"" which involves a Martian scientist whose work strangely echoes his personal life. ![]() It encompasses a number of new short stories, including at least two set in alternate universes where events have taken place quite differently than in the novels. This collection represents Robinson's further thoughts on Mars. There were pages of essays, vignettes, fables, poems, and fictional science and history, all demanding to be written. There were alternate possibilities that he still yearned to explore. ![]() There were important episodes in the lives of his major characters that hadn't made it into the novels. ![]() Having finished the trilogy, however, and gone on to write yet another major novel, Antarctica, Robinson realized that he simply wasn't done with the red planet. ![]() With a Nebula and two Hugos to its credit, Robinson's monumental Mars trilogy (Red Mars, etc.) is one of the most honored series in the history of science fiction. ![]()
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