- Source: Widescreen baroque
Widescreen baroque is a style of science fiction writing "characterized by larger-than-life characters, violence, intrigue, extravagant settings or actions, and fast-paced plotting". It is closely aligned with, and an outgrowth of, space opera fiction.
The term widescreen baroque was coined by Brian Aldiss (as "wide-screen baroque") in his 1973 work The Billion Year Spree in reference to works by E.E. Smith and A.E. van Vogt.
Authors associated with widescreen baroque include:
Stephen Baxter
Barrington Bayley
Alfred Bester
Samuel Delany
Charles L. Harness
Stanislaw Lem
Mariko Ohara
Alastair Reynolds
E.E. Smith
A.E. van Vogt
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Widescreen baroque
- The End of Evangelion
- Baroque (video game)
- Charles L. Harness
- The Paradox Men
- List of PlayStation 2 games (A–K)
- Michigan (album)
- Anamorphosis
- The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
- An American Tail