Picture of author.

C. M. Kornbluth (1923–1958)

Autor(a) de The Space Merchants

135+ Works 6,723 Membros 158 Reviews 4 Favorited

About the Author

Séries

Obras de C. M. Kornbluth

The Space Merchants (1953) 1,940 cópias
Gladiator-at-law (1955) 533 cópias
Wolfbane (1957) 520 cópias
Search the Sky (1954) 445 cópias
The Syndic (1953) 425 cópias
The Best of C. M. Kornbluth (1976) 348 cópias
A Mile Beyond the Moon (1958) 229 cópias
Not This August (1955) 208 cópias
Critical mass (1977) 175 cópias
Venus, Inc. (1984) 175 cópias
Gunner Cade (1952) — Autor — 167 cópias
The Wonder Effect (1962) 151 cópias
The Explorers (1954) 103 cópias
Outpost Mars (1951) 87 cópias
Takeoff (1952) 51 cópias
Crisis in 2140 / Gunner Cade (1957) 50 cópias
The Altar at Midnight (1952) 31 cópias
Gunner Cade & Takeoff (1983) 25 cópias
The Mindworm [short story] (1950) 23 cópias
Spaced Out: Three Novels of Tomorrow (2008) — Autor — 20 cópias
The Adventurer (1953) 18 cópias
The Rocket of 1955 (1941) 15 cópias
The Luckiest Man in Denv (1952) 15 cópias
The Silly Season (1950) 14 cópias
Reap the Dark Tide (1958) 13 cópias
The Meeting [short fiction] (1972) 11 cópias
Gomez (1955) 11 cópias
The Advent On Channel Twelve (1958) 10 cópias
Half (1953) 9 cópias
Two Dooms (1958) 9 cópias
Time Bum (1953) 8 cópias
Herold im All (1968) 7 cópias
Dominoes (1958) 7 cópias
Theory Of Rocketry (1958) 7 cópias
Friend to Man (1951) 6 cópias
Sezon ogórkowy (1985) 5 cópias
The Naked Storm (2016) 5 cópias
The Remorseful (1953) 5 cópias
Valerie (1957) 5 cópias
Presidential Year (1956) 5 cópias
The City in the Sofa (1941) 5 cópias
The Reversible Revolutions (1941) 5 cópias
The Golden Road (1942) 5 cópias
Kazam Collects (1941) 4 cópias
A Gentle Dying 4 cópias
Pollution: Omnibus (1971) — Contribuinte — 4 cópias
Make Mine Mars [novelette] (1952) 4 cópias
Virginia (1958) 4 cópias
Domek z kart (1985) 3 cópias
Best Friend 2 cópias
The Meddlers 2 cópias
Iteration 2 cópias
Dead Center 2 cópias
Masquerade 2 cópias
Mr. Packer Goes To Hell 1 exemplar(es)
CM Kornbluth 1 exemplar(es)
Sir Mallory's Magnitude 1 exemplar(es)
Passion Pills 1 exemplar(es)
CM Kornbluth 1 exemplar(es)
Return From M-15 1 exemplar(es)
Gli Idioti in marcia 1 exemplar(es)
Fire-power 1 exemplar(es)
A través del tiempo 1 exemplar(es)
Wilczojad 1 exemplar(es)
Jak wróciłem na Marsa (1994) 1 exemplar(es)
Interference 1 exemplar(es)
No Place To Go 1 exemplar(es)
The Naked Storm & The Man Outside (2016) 1 exemplar(es)
L'èra della follia 1 exemplar(es)
Frugate il cielo 1 exemplar(es)
Le Syndic - Les Sillons du ciel (1977) 1 exemplar(es)
Desfile de cretinos 1 exemplar(es)
Start zum Mond (1958) 1 exemplar(es)
Dimension Of Darkness 1 exemplar(es)
Partida para o Espaço 1 exemplar(es)
O Síndico 1 exemplar(es)
The Last Man in the Bar (1957) 1 exemplar(es)
The Core 1 exemplar(es)
The Slave 1 exemplar(es)
Der Verräter (1958) 1 exemplar(es)
Forgotten Tongue 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

The World Treasury of Science Fiction (1989) — Contribuinte — 891 cópias
The Penguin Book of Vampire Stories (1987) — Contribuinte — 889 cópias
Fifty Short Science Fiction Tales (1963) — Contribuinte — 460 cópias
100 Great Science Fiction Short Short Stories (1978) — Contribuinte — 409 cópias
The Ascent of Wonder: The Evolution of Hard SF (1994) — Contribuinte — 393 cópias
A Treasury of Great Science Fiction, Volume 1 (1959) — Contribuinte — 338 cópias
A Treasury of Great Science Fiction [2-volume set] (1959) — Contribuinte — 296 cópias
The Hugo Winners: Volume Three (1971-1975) (1977) — Autor — 266 cópias
Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Treasury (1988) — Contribuinte — 250 cópias
The Penguin Science Fiction Omnibus (1973) — Contribuinte — 249 cópias
Robert Silverberg's Worlds of Wonder (1987) — Autor — 246 cópias
The World Turned Upside Down (2005) — Contribuinte — 221 cópias
The 1975 Annual World's Best SF (1975) — Contribuinte — 209 cópias
American Science Fiction: Four Classic Novels 1953-56 (2012) — Contribuinte — 207 cópias
Arbor House Treasury of Horror and the Supernatural (1981) — Contribuinte — 199 cópias
The Arbor House Treasury of Modern Science Fiction (1980) — Contribuinte — 196 cópias
The Stars at War (1986) — Contribuinte, algumas edições193 cópias
Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 3 (1941) (1980) — Contribuinte — 153 cópias
Another Round at the Spaceport Bar (1989) — Contribuinte — 148 cópias
Time Probe: The Sciences in Science Fiction (1966) — Contribuinte — 145 cópias
Worlds to Come (1942) 142 cópias
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 6th Series (1957) — Contribuinte — 141 cópias
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 8th Series (1959) — Contribuinte — 135 cópias
My Favorite Science Fiction Story (1999) — Contribuinte — 134 cópias
The Fifth Galaxy Reader (1961) — Contribuinte — 132 cópias
Space Mail (1980) — Contribuinte — 131 cópias
A Treasury of Modern Fantasy (1981) — Contribuinte — 130 cópias
Analog: The Best of Science Fiction (1982) — Autor — 128 cópias
Science Fiction Stories (1979) — Contribuinte — 121 cópias
The Hugo Winners: Volume Three, Book 2 (1973-1975) (1977) — Contribuinte — 120 cópias
Voyagers in Time (1967) — Contribuinte — 118 cópias
Galaxy, Thirty Years of Innovative Science Fiction (1980) — Contribuinte — 114 cópias
Spectrum 4 (1965) — Contribuinte — 112 cópias
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #2 (1973) — Contribuinte — 112 cópias
Science Fiction of the 50's (1971) — Contribuinte — 111 cópias
Star Science Fiction Stories No. 2 (1953) — Contribuinte — 103 cópias
Star of Stars (1960) — Contribuinte — 103 cópias
American Science Fiction: Nine Classic Novels of the 1950s (2012) — Contribuinte — 102 cópias
First Contact (1971) — Contribuinte — 100 cópias
The Good Old Stuff (1998) — Contribuinte — 96 cópias
13 Above the Night (1965) — Contribuinte — 92 cópias
Best SF Two (1956) — Contribuinte — 92 cópias
The Crash of Empire (Imperial Stars, Book 3) (1989) — Contribuinte — 92 cópias
The Great SF Stories 12 (1950) (1973) — Contribuinte — 91 cópias
7th Annual Edition: The Year's Best S-F (1962) — Contribuinte — 91 cópias
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 22nd Series (1977) — Contribuinte — 90 cópias
Catastrophes! (1981) — Contribuinte — 89 cópias
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 7th Series (1958) — Contribuinte — 86 cópias
Science Fiction: The Great Years (1973) — Contribuinte — 86 cópias
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 4th Series (1955) — Contribuinte — 83 cópias
Star Science Fiction Stories No. 4 (1958) — Contribuinte — 82 cópias
Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 11 (1949) (1984) — Contribuinte — 82 cópias
Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 13 (1951) (1985) — Contribuinte — 82 cópias
The Mammoth Book of Fantasy All-Time Greats (1983) — Contribuinte — 81 cópias
Cities of Wonder (1967) — Contribuinte — 81 cópias
18 Greatest Science Fiction Stories (1966) — Contribuinte, algumas edições72 cópias
New Dreams This Morning (1966) — Autor — 70 cópias
Future Tense (1968) — Contribuinte — 70 cópias
Alpha 1 (1970) — Contribuinte — 68 cópias
Great Short Novels of Science Fiction (1970) — Autor — 68 cópias
The Vintage Anthology of Science Fantasy. (1966) — Contribuinte — 66 cópias
Masters of Fantasy (1992) — Contribuinte — 65 cópias
Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 19 (1957) (1989) — Contribuinte — 65 cópias
Dark Stars (1969) — Contribuinte — 65 cópias
Time Travelers (Fiction in the Fourth Dimension) (1997) — Contribuinte — 64 cópias
Mind to Mind (1971) — Contribuinte — 63 cópias
100 Astounding Little Alien Stories (1996) — Contribuinte — 59 cópias
Aliens among Us (2000) — Contribuinte — 58 cópias
Timescapes (1997) — Contribuinte — 57 cópias
Laughing Space: An Anthology of Science Fiction Humour (1982) — Contribuinte — 55 cópias
Assignment in Tomorrow: An Anthology (1954) — Contribuinte — 54 cópias
100 Hilarious Little Howlers (1999) — Contribuinte — 54 cópias
The Second Science Fiction Megapack (2011) — Autor — 53 cópias
Great Science Fiction about Doctors (1963) — Contribuinte — 53 cópias
One Hundred Years of Science Fiction : Book Two (1950) — Autor — 52 cópias
100 Years of Science Fiction (1968) — Contribuinte — 51 cópias
Alpha 2 (1971) — Contribuinte — 51 cópias
The Century's Best Horror Fiction Volume 1 (2011) — Contribuinte — 51 cópias
The End of Summer: Science Fiction of the Fifties (1979) — Contribuinte — 48 cópias
Science Fiction Contemporary Mythology (1978) — Contribuinte — 48 cópias
Alpha 7 (1977) — Contribuinte — 47 cópias
Alpha 6 (1976) — Contribuinte — 45 cópias
Inside the Funhouse: 17 Sf Stories About Sf (1992) — Contribuinte — 44 cópias
The Fantastic World War II: The War That Wasn't (1990) — Contribuinte — 43 cópias
Dimension X (Coronet Books) (1970) — Contribuinte — 43 cópias
The Shape of Things (1965) — Contribuinte — 41 cópias
Science Fiction Novel: Imagination and Social Criticism (1959) — Contribuinte — 39 cópias
Future Crimes (2003) — Contribuinte — 36 cópias
Dimension X: Five Science Fiction Novellas (1970) — Contribuinte — 35 cópias
Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction (2011) — Contribuinte — 30 cópias
Rod Serling's Night Gallery Reader (1987) — Contribuinte — 29 cópias
What If? Volume 1 (1980) — Contribuinte — 27 cópias
Your Share of Fear (1982) — Contribuinte — 25 cópias
Tomorrow and Tomorrow : Ten Tales of the Future (1973) — Contribuinte — 24 cópias
The Best Science Fiction Stories: 1951 (1951) — Contribuinte — 22 cópias
The Best Horror Stories (1977) — Contribuinte — 22 cópias
Shared tomorrows: Science fiction in collaboration (1979) — Contribuinte — 19 cópias
Intensive Scare (1990) — Contribuinte — 16 cópias
Devil Worshipers (1990) — Contribuinte — 16 cópias
The Arts and beyond: Visions of man's aesthetic future (1977) — Contribuinte — 14 cópias
Space Service (1953) — Contribuinte — 13 cópias
Astounding Science Fiction 1952 04 (1952) — Contribuinte — 11 cópias
Astounding Science Fiction 1952 01 (1952) — Contribuinte — 11 cópias
Metropolis brennt. (1982) — Contribuinte — 9 cópias
Galaxy Science Fiction 1957 November, Vol. 15, No. 1 (1957) — Contribuinte — 7 cópias
Astounding Science Fiction 1952 03 (1952) — Contribuinte — 7 cópias
Invaders from space; ten stories of science fiction (1972) — Contribuinte — 7 cópias
Det sidste spørgsmål og andre historier (1973) — Autor, algumas edições6 cópias
Marriage and the Family Through Science Fiction (1988) — Contribuinte — 6 cópias
Vanguard Science Fiction, Vol. 1, No. 1 (June, 1958) (1958) — Contribuinte — 5 cópias
Fantastic Chicago (1991) — Autor — 2 cópias
Astounding Science Fiction 1952 May (British Edition) (1952) — Contribuinte — 2 cópias

Etiquetado

20th century (62) advertising (49) anthology (2,434) C. M. Kornbluth (38) classics (38) collection (195) done (97) dystopia (60) ebook (107) English (35) fantasy (226) fiction (1,799) Frederik Pohl (44) hardcover (119) HC (42) horror (263) humor (37) Library of America (37) mmpb (37) novel (135) own (77) paperback (215) PB (67) read (165) satire (53) science fiction (5,119) Science Fiction/Fantasy (124) sf (1,657) SF Anthology (40) SFBC (57) sff (315) short fiction (76) short stories (1,577) short story collections (36) speculative fiction (55) stories (105) to-read (512) unread (219) vampire (43) vampires (139)

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Discussions

SF satire, journeys to weird societies em Name that Book (Maio 2009)

Resenhas

The Best of C.M. Kornbluth contains 19 short stories and novelettes, with interesting notes by the editor, his friend and fellow science fiction author, Frederik Pohl.

*** 'The Rocket of 1955' was first published in 1941. Our narrator claims the rocket scheme was Fein's, but he was blackmailed into helping. So was a well-regarded Viennese professor. Contributions totalled $152,285,248.22 in 2024 money. Then they got to work building that rocket. How successful was it? The author was still in his teens when he wrote this story.

**** 'The Words of Guru' has an almost 12-year-old protagonist named Peter. He's obviously a prodigy because Peter had been able to talk clearly since he was two months old. He can see things that normal people can't. He was still a baby when he first summoned Guru. Guru is willing to teach him things. The words Guru teaches Peter have power. The things Peter gets up to with the words Guru has taught him are scary. The last word taught is the most frightening.

***½ 'The Only Thing We Learn' was published three years after the end of World War II.The protagonist of this story is a history professor giving a lecture to the students in his Archaeo-Literature 203 class. He talks about the battle that led to the formation of their empire as known through old, middle, and new epics. He tells them that what they learned before wasn't exactly true, as archaeology has shown. We get snippits of the epics. I was not impressed. The scene suddenly shifts to the historical battle from the Home Suns People's point of view. I was a history major in college, so I gave this story an extra half-star for the professor pointing out what science has shown was wrong in the old epics.

***½ 'The Adventurer' is from 1953. It is set both in a United States of America that appears to be a republic in name only. It's even called 'the Republic'. The presidency has become hereditary. The Soviet Union is the Republic's principal opponent. Premier Yersinsky is its current head. There's a balance of power between the two, which is why the Moon and Titan are Republic, Mars and Ganymede are Soviet, and Jupiter's Io and Callisto are each half and half. Part of the action is set in New Pittsburgh, the main settlement of the Repulbic half of Io. Some scenes are with Presidents Folsom XXIV and XXV. Others are about Tom Grayson, from being a child with an abusive alcoholic for a father, as a cadet, and as a successful ensign. I was not expecting the revelations at the end. They are what prompted the extra half-star.

**** I've read the 1950 'The Little Black Bag' in other collections, but I don't recall its adaptation on 'Night Gallery'. Old Dr. Bayard Full lost his right to practice in 1941 because he was bilking patients. The scene introducing him cuts to the future. This is a future where people of subnormal intelligence have outbred the people of normal and supra normal intelligence.Dr. Hemingway is a stupid general practitioner. Good thing that his medical bag has been made as idiot proof as possible. He's chatting with Walter Gillis, Ph.D., a stupid physicist, who got a tip from a secretly brilliant physicist. Gillis demonstrates his time machine using Dr. Hemingway's medical bag. The bag turns up in Dr. Full's apartment. The bag helps him save a little girl's life. A sharp blonde named Angie guesses that the bag isn't his and blackmails him into letting her be his assistant. After a time as a success, Dr. Full has an altruistic plan, which he tells greedy Angie about. It does not end well.

***½ 1952's 'The Luckiest Man in Denv' is another story set in a dystopian future America. Our protagonist is Reuben, known as 'May's Man Reuben,' because he works for three-star General May on the eighty-third level. Reuben is an Atomist. A plot General May told him about does not go as the plotters planned. Another attempt is made against Reuben. This was a very unpleasant story about a very unpleasant future. I didn't expect the end, but it was fittingly unpleasant.

**** 1950's 'The Silly Season' is a story about reporters. According to Mr. Pohl's introduction, Mr. Kornbluth was a reporter. The silly season is usually in the late summer, when there aren't major stories happening, so the media puts out stories that aren't serious. Sam Williams needs a story. The control bureau in New York is nagging. He gets one from a stringer (freelance journalist) named Benson in Fort Hicks, Arkansas. It's a weird story, with a mysterious death involved. Williams passes it on.The strange phenomenon gets a lot of news coverage until the baseball World Series comes along. The next year there's a different weird happening, but it doesn't attract much attention, as a letter from Benson had predicted. The year after that, yet another weird happening gets no attention even though one person was killed. The end is as Benson predicted, based on one of Aesop's best-known fables. I'm sure the characters wish he'd been wrong.

**** 1953's 'The Remorseful' gives us yet another dystopian future Earth. The Lonely Man, apparently the last man alive on Earth, roams around what was the USA. He keeps talking to himself because he breaks down and sobs when speech fails him. Extra-terrestrial aliens called 'the Visitors' (creatures made up of a billion little insect-like creatures with a hive mind) come to Earth. On Earth they keep meeting males and females with weak wave trains that ignore them before they meet the Lonely Man. The Visitors get what information they can from a library, which gives them the name of those they've encountered.
Do NOT read this story if you're depressed.

**** 1955's 'Gomez' has a Puerto Rican teen genius for its hero, which I appreciate, considering the way many people treat Puerto Ricans these days (and it was probably worse back then). Gomez is paid to use his genius regarding atomic energy for the government. I'm glad he turned out to be so ethical.

*** According to Mr. Pohls' introduction to 1958's 'The Advent on Channel Twelve,' Mr. Kornbluth and his two small sons watched 'The Mickey Mouse Club'. He says we'll be able to figure out what the author thought of the Mickey Mouse mania back then by reading this story. It's written in old-fashioned Biblical style. Pity Ben Graffis and what some bankers made him do with his creation, Poopy Panda.

***** I'm giving 1951's 'The Marching Morons' five stars not because I like the story, but because it's stuck in my mind for decades. This is a similar dystopian future Earth to the one in 'The Little Black Bag'. Instead of a doctor's bag from the future arriving in the present, a 20th century real estate developer named 'Honest' John Barlow is awakened from accidental suspended animation in the future. 3 million brilliant humans are vastly outnumbered by 5 billion humans with an average IQ of 45, which means they are moderately mentally disabled. The smarties hope that John Barlow can help them with the population problem. The problem is solved and Barlow gets his reward.

*** 1957's 'The Last Man in the Bar' is a fairly weird story. Most of the action takes place in a bar where a loner named Edward is hiding out, continuing to order drinks. The loner has visited the future and swiped something important. Galardo and a 'mouse-eyed lassie' are trying to get it back to prevent the Century of Flame starting. Will they succeed?

**** 1950's 'The Mindworm' is a creepy bit of science fiction horror. The Mindworm was born a telepath because his unmarried parents were a little too close to an atomic test before mating. Over the years he wanders, killing people, feeding on their emotions. We get to know only a few of his victims. He winds up in a small place with quite a few Eastern European immigrants.
Notes: Here 'native-American' means a person born in the USA. Calling indigenous people 'Native Americans' started in the 1960s. This story takes place before birth control pills were available and an unmarried woman who got pregnant was a scandal.

**** 1951's 'With These Hands' seems even more timely with the advent of artificial intelligence art. Poor Roald Halvorsen is a genuine artist in a post-nuclear war [Europe, anyway] era in which the public would rather have 'art' by stereopantograph, using a machine called an 'esthetikon'. At the end of the story, Halversen finally fulfills his wish to see Milles' Orpheus Fountain, which is real, but it's in Stockholm, Sweden, not Copenhagen, Denmark (as I found out when I looked it up). That isn't quite a happy ending.

***½ 1953's 'Shark Ship' is a disturbing novelette about yet another dystopian future Earth. It's been generations since the convoys of gigantic ships, each with 20,000 inhabitants, left the land to live in the Atlantic ocean. We're dealing with the 75 ships of the Grenville Convoy. It's the southern spawning season, and everyone old enough to work is working hard. If they don't harvest enough food to last for six months (until the northern spawning season), they'll starve. Captain Salter of Ship Starboard 30 has to help his people when their vital net is lost in a storm. The ship makes its way to New York City. What they find there (and the flashback that tells us how it got that way) is worthy of a horror movie. I do appreciate the fact that Yeoman Jewel Flyte is the quickest and most imaginative thinker among the team.

**** 1951's 'Friend to Man' is set on an unnamed planet. We're invited to call the main human character 'Smith'. He's an evil man. He's attempting an escape when his ship crashes in a desert. A native of the planet takes him to her burrow. She gives him food and water and tends him. Smith is actually thinking of reforming when Karma comes knocking. I really liked this story!

**** 1952's 'The Altar at Midnight' is set in a future that's pretty much as things were in the 20th century, except we have regular space travel - at least to the moon, Mars, and Venus. Spacer pay is high because spacers become disfigured. The narrator meets a young spacer and takes him to the skid row area to spend time with disabled former railroad workers, who won't give him looks. The narrator sees to it that the young man gets safely to the Y.M.C.A. We learn what wrecked the narrator's life.

*** According to Mr. Pohl's introduction, 1953's 'Dominoes' was inspired by a conversation between Messrs. Pohl and Kornbluth about the causes of the Stock Market Crash of 1929. It's April, 1975 and stock broker William 'Will' J. Born is worried that the Great Boom of 1975 is going to crash. He's even paid money to inventor Loring to build a time machine so he can go to the future and find out when that crash will be. The time machine works. It's what Born does with his knowledge that earns him his unhappy ending.

**** 1958's posthumously published 'Two Dooms' has a dystopian future, but a conditional one. Protagonist Dr. Edward Royland is a theoretical physicist working on the Manhattasn Project. (I'm pleased that women using adding machines for calculations are mentioned.) The latest calculations would work, but Royland is worried about what an atomic bomb could do. Dr. Royland visits his Hopi medicine man friend, Charles Miller Nahataspe, on his reservation. Charles gives him mushrooms called 'God Food'. Charles thinks it will be safe because whites' eyes are 'clouded'. They do not see clearly, as Hopi do. Charles is horrified to find out that Royland does see clearly. Royland finds himself in the year 2105, 150 years after the War of Triumph (1940-1955). Royland learns how the Germans and the Japanese won and what happened after. To say that things are not well (unless one is German or Japanese) is putting it mildly. At least Royland can understand because the conquerors insisted all use American speech so that no subjected race's language is dominant. Will Royland be able to make it back to 1945? If he does, will he have changed his mind about the atom bomb?

Most of the stories in this book are very good, but they're so cynical that I don't recommend reading more than one of two stories a day -- and watch or read something funny as a mind cleanser.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
JalenV | outras 2 resenhas | Apr 27, 2024 |
I really like Pohl and admire some of his work. I had head so many good things about this book I had to have it. Now that I've read it I am less enthusiastic. It is a OK SF book and I'm sure it was well ahead of it's time in the 1950s. His "Gateway" books are better.
 
Marcado
ikeman100 | outras 57 resenhas | Apr 25, 2024 |
1958's posthumously published 'Two Dooms' has a dystopian future, but a conditional one.

Protagonist Dr. Edward Royland is a theoretical physicist working on the Manhattasn Project. (I'm pleased that women using adding machines for calculations are mentioned, even if Dr. Royland would have rather have a differential analyzer machine.) One of the women brings Royland the latest calculations. He realizes it will work, but is horrified contemplating what an atomic bomb could do.

Dr. Royland visits his Hopi medicine man friend, Charles Miller Nahataspe, on his reservation. Charles gives him mushrooms called 'God Food'. Charles thinks it will be safe because whites' eyes are 'clouded'. They do not see clearly, as Hopi do. Charles is horrified to find out that Royland does see clearly.

Royland finds himself in the year 2105, 150 years after the War of Triumph (1940-1955). Royland learns how the Germans and the Japanese won and what happened after. To say that things are not well (unless one is German or Japanese) is putting it mildly. At least they insisted on using American speech so that no subjected race's language is dominant.

Royland puzzles the folks in charge whom he meets because he has no tattooed numbers. He escapes, spends some time in a village of mostly Chinese and Hindu people, has to escape again, and makes his way to a city. I really liked his rant about the way women are treated in that village. Will Royland be able to make it back to 1945? If he does, will he have changed his mind about the atom bomb?

Notes:

'The Dogpatch Legend' and "Abnerites' might be a reference or in-joke regarding Al Capp's then-popular comic strip, 'Li'l Abner', about a hillbilly from a fictional mountain village called Dogpatch, USA.

Bloom was correct that there was a woman who allegedly made lampshades from the tattooed skins of concentration camp prisoners. Her name was Ilse Koch. There was no evidence she did it at her trial. She hanged herself. I did read about some of the Nazi medical experiments in 'The New England Journal of Medicine,' decades ago, when I was a medical librarian, but not Bloom's story about women being used to revive frozen men.

It was a very good story.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
JalenV | 1 outra resenha | Apr 23, 2024 |
According to Mr. Pohl's introduction, 1953's 'Dominoes" was inspired by a conversation between Messrs. Pohl and Kornbluth about the causes of the Stock Market Crash of 1929.

It's April, 1975 and stock broker William 'Will' J. Born is worried that the Great Boom of 1975 is going to crash. He's even paid money to inventor Loring to build a time machine so he can go to the future and find out when that crash will be.

The time machine works. It's what Born does with his knowledge that earns him his unhappy ending. I'm not sorry for him. I did think it was an interesting coincidence that this New York City man arrived in the future on September 11, 1977, even though '9/11' had no significance back then.… (mais)
 
Marcado
JalenV | Apr 18, 2024 |

Listas

Prêmios

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Frederik Pohl Afterword, Introduction, Editor
Clifford D. Simak Contributor
Ed Emsh Cover artist
Richard M. Powers Cover artist, Cover Artist
Edmund Crispin Introduction
Jael Cover artist
Dan Bittner Narrator
Karel Thole Cover artist
John Griffiths Cover artist
Tom Kidd Cover artist
John Berkey Cover artist
Okko H. Reussien Translator
Karel Meijer Cover artist
Louise Meermin Translator
Vincent DiFate Cover artist
Howard V. Chaykin Cover artist
Gary Viskupic Cover artist
Rus Anderson Cover artist
Dean Ellis Cover artist
Remy Charlip Illustrator
Richard Powers Cover artist
Mel Hunter Cover artist
Thomas Görden Translator
C.W. Bacon Cover artist
Paul Lehr Cover artist
Eddie Jones Cover artist
Jean Rosenthal Translator
Francis Valéry Translator
Ian Yeomans Cover photograph
Robert Stanley Cover artist
Isidre Mones Cover artist
Robert A. Maguire Cover artist
Joachim Körber Translator

Estatísticas

Obras
135
Also by
135
Membros
6,723
Popularidade
#3,640
Avaliação
3.8
Resenhas
158
ISBNs
190
Idiomas
14
Favorito
4

Tabelas & Gráficos