
It includes ten progress-skeptical tales in which official promises are worth somewhat less than the paper they’re written on and technology proves to be a decidedly two-edged sword. Six collections of his science fiction yarns were published during his life, and What’s Become of Screwloose? And Other Inquiries (DAW 1971) is as good a book to start with as any of them. You can get a good idea of Goulart’s method by dipping into his short stories.

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Season lightly - or not so lightly, really - with technology run amok, and you have a 160-page novel (or about fifty of them) that you can zip through with a good amount of enjoyment.
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These too were potboilers of a sort, but Goulart was clearly enjoying himself when he wrote them, and they are full of wacky, fizzy slapstick invention, often featuring inept, comically corrupt bureaucracies and complication-producing identity mix-ups, with classically farcical consequences. He was also William Shatner’s ghostwriter on the actor’s TekWarbooks what would you give to have been a fly on the wall during their story conferences? “What do you think of this idea, Ron?” “It’s dead, Bill.”Īt the same time he was doing all this, though, Goulart was also cranking out novels and stories set in his own original venues with his own original characters, chief among them books featuring the shapeshifting galactic peacekeepers of the Chameleon Corps many of these tales were set in the chaotic Barnum System, which also hosted many non-Chameleon Corps stories.Ī lot of Goulart’s books were published by DAW it sometimes seemed as if that publisher put out a new Goulart every three or four weeks. These productions are about what you would expect - professional, work-for-hire potboilers written at high speed for the sole purpose of keeping the refrigerator stocked and the gas and electricity on.
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Ron Goulart, who died on January 14 th, a day after his eighty-ninth birthday, was an insanely prolific science fiction and mystery writer, especially in the 70’s and 80’s, when he wrote over one hundred novels, many of them pseudonymous entries in various “copyrighted character” series such as The Avenger, Flash Gordon, Vampirella, and The Phantom. Lafferty, Frederic Brown, Robert Sheckley… and Ron Goulart. The humorous mode has a long and honorable history, exemplified by writers like Stanislaw Lem, Harry Harrison, R.A. If you can't use the Slapdash desktop app, this extension will also give you a Command Bar that will work on any page you have open in Chrome.Contrary to popular opinion, comic science fiction didn’t start and end with Douglas Adams and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
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Installing the extension will also make connecting applications easier: providing better recommendations and cutting down the manual steps required to connect certain apps. When opening something from Slapdash, the extension will prevent the loading of a new tab, opting to re-use an already-open one instead. This extension also makes the overall Slapdash experience faster, with tab recycling. When opening the Command Bar while looking at a page in Chrome, the Command Bar will recommend contextual commands based on the page you are on. For both features, no data gets sent to Slapdash servers. You'll also get access to the "Chrome History" command to quickly search through what you've seen.

Your open tabs will be searchable directly from the Slapdash desktop app. This extension adds Chrome superpowers to Slapdash while enhancing the overall Slapdash experience. Slapdash is a rethink of how we work with our cloud apps, with a focus on speed.
