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''Farewell Fantastic Venus'' is a science fiction anthology edited by Brian Aldiss and Harry Harrison. It was first published in 1968 as a direct response to the information returned from the first space probes sent to Venus, especially the first atmospheric probe to return data, Venera 4. The first data was not returned from the surface until Venera 7 successfully landed in 1970. The book contains stories and novel excerpts from the time before Venus' true nature became apparent, when the clouded planet could still be imagined as another Earth, albeit a hotter one. From that point on, no stories would be written which did not recognize Venus as a dry lifeless world with acid clouds and a temperature high enough to melt lead. Writers such as Larry Niven (''Becalmed in Hell'') did write about the "new" Venus, but there were to be no more transplanted jungle adventures, no imagined world of oceans with monsters, no Venusians. Venus had been the best hope for extraterrestrial life, and now that hope was lost. (Later, however, writers avoided this apparent impasse through using hard science fiction premises for future terraforming of Venus, or resorted to alternate world science fiction, where Venus had either been terraformed by aliens in the distant past to provide an earthlike biosphere, or had undergone different processes of planetary formation to arrive at an inhabitable alternative). The authors whose stories were included ranged from C.S. Lewis (excerpt from ''Perelandra'') to Edgar Rice Burroughs (excerpt from ''Pirates of Venus'') and from Olaf Stapledon (excerpt from ''Last and First Men'') to Poul Anderson (''The Big Rain'', ''Sister Planet''). Essays and meditations from a variety of scientists and SF writers were also included in the collection. ==Contents== Texts in the book include: 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Farewell Fantastic Venus」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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