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Dangerous Vegetables

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Do you ever worry about your vegetables eating you? Maybe you should. As those who doted on his "Retief" stories know, Keith Laumer was a man who delighted in his own genuinely twisted sense of humor. Though he left us before he could complete this book, the publisher hopes that he, wherever he is, as well as the audience, like how we finished it for him. Introduction by Ben Bova.

384 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1998

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About the author

Keith Laumer

498 books225 followers
John Keith Laumer was an American science fiction author. Prior to becoming a full-time writer, he was an officer in the U.S. Air Force and a U.S. diplomat. His brother March Laumer was also a writer, known for his adult reinterpretations of the Land of Oz (also mentioned in Keith's The Other Side of Time).

Keith Laumer (aka J.K Laumer, J. Keith Laumer) is best known for his Bolo stories and his satirical Retief series. The former chronicles the evolution of juggernaut-sized tanks that eventually become self-aware through the constant improvement resulting from centuries of intermittent warfare against various alien races. The latter deals with the adventures of a cynical spacefaring diplomat who constantly has to overcome the red-tape-infused failures of people with names like Ambassador Grossblunder. The Retief stories were greatly influenced by Laumer's earlier career in the United States Foreign Service. In an interview with Paul Walker of Luna Monthly, Laumer states "I had no shortage of iniquitous memories of the Foreign Service."

Four of his shorter works received Hugo or Nebula Award nominations (one of them, "In the Queue", received nominations for both) and his novel A Plague of Demons was nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1966.

During the peak years of 1959–1971, Laumer was a prolific science fiction writer, with his novels tending to follow one of two patterns: fast-paced, straight adventures in time and space, with an emphasis on lone-wolf, latent superman protagonists, self-sacrifice and transcendence or, broad comedies, sometimes of the over-the-top variety.

In 1971, Laumer suffered a stroke while working on the novel The Ultimax Man. As a result, he was unable to write for a few years. As he explained in an interview with Charles Platt published in The Dream Makers (1987), he refused to accept the doctors' diagnosis. He came up with an alternative explanation and developed an alternative (and very painful) treatment program. Although he was unable to write in the early 1970s, he had a number of books which were in the pipeline at the time of the stroke published during that time.

In the mid-1970s, Laumer partially recovered from the stroke and resumed writing. However, the quality of his work suffered and his career declined (Piers Anthony, How Precious Was That While, 2002). In later years Laumer also reused scenarios and characters from his earlier works to create "new" books, which some critics felt was to their detriment:

Alas, Retief to the Rescue doesn't seem so much like a new Retief novel, but a kind of Cuisnart mélange of past books.

-- Somtow Sucharitkul (Washington Post, Mar 27, 1983. p. BW11)

His Bolo creations were popular enough that other authors have written standalone science-fiction novels about them.

Laumer was also a model airplane enthusiast, and published two dozen designs between 1956 and 1962 in the U.S. magazines Air Trails, Model Airplane News and Flying Models, as well as the British magazine Aero Modeler. He published one book on the subject, How to Design and Build Flying Models in 1960. His later designs were mostly gas-powered free flight planes, and had a whimsical charm with names to match, like the "Twin Lizzie" and the "Lulla-Bi". His designs are still being revisited, reinvented and built today.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for William Micheal.
3 reviews
May 29, 2019
I discovered this book while deployed overseas,it was a welcome distraction from the political tension in our area. There were some terrific stories to story my imagination, but Manna....Manna outright chilled me.Im shocked it hasn't been made a movie yet.
1,100 reviews
March 2, 2021
As with all collections of short stories, some better than others. But not really any that grabbed me and made me say "I want more of this." The best of the lot was the Berserker story by Saberhagen, but even that didn't make me want to run out and start reading the Berserker series of novels. It probably doesn't help that, other than being short stories, this book is NOTHING like the synopsis would lead you to believe. The synopsis reads "light, funny, probably campy stories involving odd vegetables". The reality is more "dark horror stories involving evil vegetables". Except the Berserker story, which was "vegetables employed for uncustomary purposes," but still not humorous.
Profile Image for Irvn Rynning.
7 reviews2 followers
October 28, 2022
excellent stuff, some funny (the potato story; the holly bush gone bad) some grim (the wheat farmers' blight) and all part of the role that veggies play in our lives.
highly recommended
93 reviews
February 21, 2022
A collection of short stories that verge on horror stories. Not my taste.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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