
Stealing Alabama
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Narrated by:
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Marc Vietor
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Allen Steele (introduction)
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By:
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Allen Steele
About this listen
The second American Revolution has propelled the Southern-controlled United Republic of America into power, its oppressive laws enforced by the National Reform Program's re-education camps. The citizens are suffering from a militaristic tyranny and federal extortion at the expense of an ambitious space program designed to propagate the galaxy with model citizens of the Republic. But a silent underground faction plans to commandeer a ship and make a great escape to the stars.
BONUS AUDIO: Author Allen Steele explains how he drew from U.S. history to write this Hugo-nominated novella.
©2001 Allen M. Steele, (P)2008 Audible, Inc.Critic reviews
- Hugo Award Nominee, Best Novella, 2002
Stealing Alabama is, as Allen Steele explains in the introduction, a story about the settlement of the United States in a science fiction context. Here, space is the ???New World??? and its new settlers are fearful, but hopeful of a better life where they???ll be free of tyranny.
I was intrigued by the premise of Stealing Alabama and I thought it was an entertaining story. Unfortunately, the plot focuses mostly on the actual logistics of the covert operation rather than philosophical discussion of why the dissidents want to leave or the immense mental and emotional consequences of realizing you???re about to abandon everything you know for something completely unknown. Allen Steele could have done so much more with this aspect of the story. Stealing Alabama is the beginning of his novel Coyote, and I???d guess that the novel more fully explores these issues, but they???re noticeably lacking here and it affects the emotional impact of the story. Still, I liked it enough that I want to read Coyote.
The setting of Stealing Alabama is, of course, Florida???s Space Coast. That???s where I grew up, so it was a joy to visit the cities, rivers, islands, causeways, and beaches I???m so familiar with. I had flashbacks when Steele describes the way that thousands of people camp out along the waterways to wait for the shuttle launch. This was one of my favorite parts of the book.
Audible Frontier???s version of this Hugo-nominated story is 3 hours long and performed by Marc Vietor who, I???m starting to believe, can do no wrong.
Originally posted at Fantasy Literature.
U.S. history in SF context
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Just an Extract
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Great read but is simply an extract from Coyote
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