Monthly Archives: December 2018

Robert Silverberg in Thebes

“Thebes of the Hundred Gates”
Most recently reprinted in Hot Times in Magma City
ebook $2.99

In the comments to my previous post, Randy suggested that “Thebes of the Hundred Gates” was one Robert Silverberg’s best time travel stories.  I hadn’t read it, but I did have a copy on one of my ereaders.

So I read it.

I’ll agree with Randy.  It’s a very good story.  So Randy, thanks for the tip.

Here’s the situation: Continue reading

Going Up the Line

Up the Line
Robert Silverberg

I’m a sucker for a good time travel story.  It’s one of my favorite subgenres.   Robert Silverberg has written just about all subgenres in the field. Up the Line is definitely a well constructed time travel tale, although not entirely to my taste.

Before I go on, though, I want to note that this novel is currently out of print, and there’s no electronic version available. That’s why there’s not link above.

Up the Line was published in the summer of 1969, which means it was probably written in 1968, a year after the Summer of Love.  It reads like it, too.  Lots of sex.  Lots of drugs.  No rock n’ roll, though. Continue reading

When the Void is Your Destination

Destination: Void
Frank Herbert
ebook $7.99

A few months ago, I posted about Frank Herbert’s birthday and read a couple of his short stories.  I’ve had a few of his novels sitting around for, well, quite some time.  So I started reading Destination: Void.

I finished it two days ago.  Up until a few years ago, I wouldn’t start another book until I had finished the one I was reading.  Lately, I’ve started reading whatever is at hand resulting in a number of books lying around in various stages of completion.  Destination:  Void was one of those.

Before I review the book, I want to say that this was the revised edition.  The novel was originally published in the 1960s.  A revised edition was published in the late 1970s, shortly before Herbert and Bill Ransom collaborated on a sequel, The Jesus IncidentContinue reading

Update on the Pre-Campbell Challenge

No, I haven’t given up on this challenge, but I have had to put it on hold due to time restrictions.

I’m going to relaunch it sometime in January or early February.  There are some things related to my wife’s cancer and my job that could interfere with restarting, so I’m not sure of the exact start date.

I’m going to modify the challenge a bit and focus initially on two anthologies.  One will be Before the Golden Age, edited by Isaac Asimov.  The other is Science Fiction of the 30’s, edited by Damon Knight.

The Asimov anthology is considerably longer, and he broke the book up into years, with autobiographical essays between the stories.  Knight, on the other hand, has divided his book into three sections that are basically Beginning, Middle, and End, although his terminology is a little different.  In both books, there are multiple stories per each section.

There’s also very little overlap between the two books.  So here’s what I’m going to do.  I’m going to read all the stories in a section and write a single post about them.  This means, of course or at least of course for those who can do math, that I will be posting more about Before the Golden Age than I will about Science Fiction of the 30’s.

I’ll also try to compare and contrast the two editors’ tastes.  We’ll see how well that works.

I read both of these anthologies decades years ago.  I’m pretty sure I was in 8th or 9th grade when I read BtGA, because I can still remember the second hand shop where I bought it.  (That was a marvelous place, full of books by authors I had only heard about or only read a short story by, probably in a Robert Silverberg anthology in the junior high library.)  I’m sure it was later in high school, possibly college or even early graduate school, when I read Science Fiction of the 30’s.

I know I greatly  enjoyed both books, and they both had a lasting impact on my reading tastes, especially the Asimov collection.  So that will be one of my projects at the beginning of the year.

Two by Garrett and a Nod to Clarke and PKD

Randall Garrett

Today, December 16, marks a number of birthdays, but I want to focus on one, Randall Garrett’s, and mention two others, Arthur C. Clarke’s and Phillip K. Dick’s.

Garrett (b. 1927) is a particular favorite of mine.  He wrote both novels and short stories, as well as reviews of classic science fiction in poetry form.  Garrett isn’t well remembered today, and to the extent that he is, he’s known for the Lord Darcy stories, which mix magic and mystery in an alternate timeline. Continue reading