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Tales of time and space

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Journey to worlds beyond time and space. Taste the thrill of high adventure in the far-flung corners of the universe. Encounter cosmic dangers and unearthly, superhuman beings. Abandon yourself to the spell cast by these eight outstanding chroniclers of science fiction in TALES OF TIME AND SPACE.

All the Time in the World • (1952) • Arthur C. Clarke
Puppet Show • (1962) • Fredric Brown
Birds of a Feather • (1958) • Robert Silverberg
Clutch of Morpheus • (1946) • Larry Sternig
The Last Command • [Bolo] • (1967) • Keith Laumer
Fog • (1951) • William Campbell Gault
The Martian Crown Jewels • (1958) • Poul Anderson
Of Missing Persons • (1955) • Jack Finney

212 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1969

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49 people want to read

About the author

Ross R. Olney

116 books2 followers
Ross Robert Olney

Author, radio and TV talk show host, and newspaper photographer, reporter/columnist, has published more than 180 books, most with major New York publishers, and hundreds of magazine articles including several in Readers Digest. Also a prize-winning photographer who often illustrates his own books and the books of other authors, he has many photos in media such as book jackets and calendars.

His books cover a wide range of fiction and non-fiction subjects from astronomy and space travel to imagery, the law, magic, nature, automobiles and auto racing, sports and science, and include the best-selling DAREDEVILS OF THE SPEEDWAY and the multi-award winning OFFSHORE! His most recent books are on race driver Lynn St. James and on the history of the death penalty, for younger readers, and an adult biography on Lt. Col. Charles S. Hudson, the most decorated bombardier in WWII (COMBAT, HE WROTE!).

He is currently working on the only authorized biography of murdered race car driver Mickey Thompson with Thompson's famed sister, Colleen Thompson Campbell, who is world acclaimed as a victims' rights advocate.

Olney is a teacher of writing and publishing with periodic classes at various colleges in the area including UCLA, USC, UCSB, and both Oxnard and Ventura College, in the Southern California region, and he lectures upon request throughout the United States. His students have a remarkable record of publication, many of them publishing first books and some becoming full time writers.

Olney served six years in the United States Air Force, flew 100 combat missions in Korea, and was decorated several times. Copies of his works, references, and a more complete biography available upon request.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for David.
Author 20 books404 followers
September 2, 2012
It's pretty iffy rating a book I have not read since I was about 12, but I'm trying to go through my (physical) shelves and catalog all the books I own but haven't yet put on Goodreads, 'cause I'm compulsive that way. Anyway, this book was given to me as a Christmas or birthday present, I think. It's a collection of short stories by several well-known SF authors (though some of them I do not recognize - who's Fredric Brown? I'm sure there are Fredric Brown fans out there who will be aghast at my ignorance of sci-fi history). This is basically a children's book, meaning the stories were selected to appeal to younger SF readers. (Let's face it: boys. It's very much boys' fiction, from what I remember, which is not to say that girls won't like it, just that this is kind of filling the "Heinlein juveniles" niche.)

Anyway, I only dimly remember a couple of the stories, but I know 12-year-old me liked it very much. It is sitting there on my bookshelf waiting for me to reread it again someday, sad that I never had kids to pass it on to.
Profile Image for Philipp Michel.
4 reviews
October 7, 2020

on Ross R. Olney's Tales of Time and Space

Tales of Time and Space, edited by Ross R. Olney, consists of a number of simply plotted little stories by some of science fiction's best. They are simply plotted yet enthralling. Don't know what passes for young adult fiction these days, but these stories fit the bill for me in days gone buy.

10 • Yesterday's Fantasy, Today's Fact-an Introduction • essay by Ross R. Olney
No one has read much science fiction without having been told how imaginative/speculative/science fiction/fantasy foretold most common place advances long before they were made. This may have been the first book in which I read the idea.

15 • All the Time in the World • (1952) • shortstory by Arthur C. Clarke Sir Author C. Clarke is best known for "2001: A Space Odyssey", "Childhood's End", and "Rendevous with Rama".
Any offer that sounds too good probably has a catch, and so it is in this story. Say you're a thief by trade and someone offers a million pounds to hire you to clean out a national museum. They offer to lend you a bracelet that accelerates time around you so that you can be in and out in a flash. or a blink of an eye. You'd be a fool not to, right?

A tight little story about the thief's moral qualms. The ending was not surprising. Would have made a good Twilight Zone. It was an episode in the TV series Tales of Tomorrow. It was Clarke's first story adapted to TV.

34 • Puppet Show • (1962) • shortstory by Fredric Brown
Fredric Brown also wrote "Arena", the story the Star Trek (TOS) episode of the same name was/wasn't based on. First contacts can be dicey. Say you're assigned by a vast Galactic Federation to evaluate Earth in general and the United States in particular. What questions would you ask and what assurances would you make? And what sort of tests would you perform? And what is a "master race" anyway? A pointy little story about ethnocentrism. It's one of Brown's last stories and one of several First Contact stories. Brown does a wonderful job of setting up the reader for the ending.

50 • Birds of a Feather is a1958 novelette by Robert Silverberg
Robert Silverberg sold his first stories in 1953 and 1954. He still writes a column for Asimov's Science Fiction. The first story of his I remember reading is Nightwings in The Hugo Winners.

Birds are ruthless competitors. They are the surviving dinosaurs, and their survival instincts are hard-wired into their old reptile cortices. How fitting an analogy to describe the protagonist and antagonist in this story. Say you run a special sort of show. Non-humans line up to get in. You have to turn away most. But what if a con artist puts one over you and horns in under false pretenses? Now you've got an employee sharp enough to squeeze you out of a sweet deal. But he can't out-con a con, when you've got the goods on him.

This is a fun and imaginative read. The variety of xenophonts reminds me of Poul Anderson's stories.

82 • Clutch of Morpheus is a 1946 a short story by William Campbell Gault [as by Larry Sternig ]
Say you were born with a mutation. Not an obvious-to-the-eye mutation, but you don't sleep, haven't slept, can't sleep. Say you've been poked and prodded and examined by scientists and physicians and the public to the point of taking an assumed name to avoid further publicity. But you're curious-- what's it like? you wonder. What's it like to sleep? So you look up the leading anesthesiologist in the country and discuss it with him over dinner. Meanwhile, there's a comet in the sky, and Earth is situated in its tale, and will be for some time. Long story short, it has a soporific effect on everyone else. You get to figure out the solution to their problem, which happens to be the solution to your own, through an incredible string of co-incidences.

The story stretches the ability to suspend disbelief, which wasn't a problem when I first read the story, and which does not seem an insurmountable problem in most readers of science fiction. Mumblety-mumble years of reading this stuff means seldom being surprised by an ending, but I enjoyed it just the same.

105 • The Last Command is a Bolo 1967 short story by Keith Laumer
Dave Drake tells in his preface to Hammer's Slammers that he was heavily influenced by Laumer's Bolo's. The professionalism and dedication to duty that Drake describes in his own unit, the Viet Nam era Blackhorse , is seen also in Laumer's , "Unit LNE of the Dinochrome Brigade!" a Mark XXVIII Bolo and his former commander, Lieutenant Sanders. Unit LNE of the Dinochrome Brigade."

Say you awaken buried and crippled, the blasting at a construction site 70 years after your burial has jarred you awake and triggered your Battle Mode Reflex. On escaping your tomb and finding yourself not only crippled but alone, you conclude that your unit has been annihilated by a counter attack. You do not realize 70 years have past and that the city ahead of you is a civilian city and not the enemy's stronghold. Your duty is clear. Whatever the cost, duty demands that you charge the ramparts and inflict as much harm on the enemy as you can before you succumb. Nothing now on planet can stop a BOLO Mark XXVIII. (The artillery and air strikes they lay on you just knock some of the debris off.) Your old commander, Lieutenant Sanders, is 90 years old and still has his old uniform. He sees your return on TV and knows that he will need to talk to you to stop this rampage. Communication from a distance proves not to be efficacious, and Sanders must climb aboard your hull to make contact. The problem with this is you are still incredibly radioactive from the hits taken during the late battle. (You don't know you and the others had been buried under 200 yards of rock because clean-up would have been too costly.) Sanders receives a far greater than lethal dose in making contact, but you recognize him despite time's ravages; you break-off and retire ten miles to the desert. Together you roll into the past of a world that no longer needs nor can appreciate your service.

136 • Fog is a 1951 a short story by William Campbell Gault
This is a somber tale that is hard to grip. Perhaps it would fit in today's idiom in which understanding of the goals and motives of the antagonist isn't important. It isn't important to understand how the protagonist got into this mess. The important thing is the courage and self abnegation of the protagonist. More subtly and appalling is the extremes to which the U.S. is willing to go to win. Russia lies a desolate, radioactive wasteland. So the means used to end the Veneran threat is a logical extension of a successful solution. I thought the story a little cheesy and the emotion rending (or not) ending reminded me of the ending of "A Question of Courage" by J. F. Bone.

Say you're an orphan. The only father you've known is the head of the Science Department, your boss, The Old Man. So The Old Man calls you to his office to send you to investigate a killer fog in San Francisco. Fog in San Francisco is not troubling. The dramatic increase in suicides associated with this fog is troubling, and it is accelerating. Unbeknownst to The Old Man is that you are secretly working for the Venereans, the inhabitants of the planet Venus. Of course, the Venereans are behind the fog. After allowing sufficient time for the significance of the escalating suicide rate to sink in, the Venereans issue an ultimatum-- surrender or else. Your job becomes to carry the response to Venus.

161 • The Martian Crown Jewels is a 1958 a short story by Poul Anderson Poul Anderson is best known for his Technic Civilization and Time Patrol stories.
Say you're a Martian private detective who admires Sherlock Holmes. Say the Crown Jewels have been loaned to Earth and stolen during the journey home. The diplomatic situation that would result from knowledge of the loss of the jewels becoming public would be unfortunate. Through application of some physics, clear thinking, and deduction, you solve the mystery and expose the culprits.

189 • Of Missing Persons is a short story by Jack Finney
Say you work at a mediocre little job and live a desperate little life. The meanness of your existence eats away at you a little more each and every day. Each and every day you yearn for something better. At last, the way out, the way home, the way to a better life is there for you to take. If you don't funk at the crucial moment.

Jack Finney's best known work is "The Invasion of the Body Snatchers". This poignant tale touches the reader because the protagonist's feelings of quiet desperation in this story written sixty years ago are the feelings many of us have today.
Profile Image for Eddie Hagler.
1 review4 followers
June 27, 2014
I read this as a child. It's stories have stayed with me as a part of my foundation of science fiction stories. I enjoyed it then. The stories are not very sophisticated but they are fun to think about even as an adult.

Profile Image for Jon FK.
108 reviews2 followers
April 13, 2023
Published in 1969, with stories that go back to 1945, this science fiction anthology surprised me. I expected old, hokey, noir vibes from this period and found little of that. As well as some stories that were a bit one-dimensional tropes, some of the stories here seem original and hold more emotional weight than I thought they would. Some seemingly timeless concepts were written and carry existential questions that are relevant to today. Although the style is fairly dry and matter-of-fact, this collection was overall worth the read.
Profile Image for Frankie Mahrle.
Author 1 book
April 17, 2015
I still own this book. The Clutch of Morpheus concept is as good as any, even though the writing is Mad Men-esque. The inexorable pace of Keith Laumer's juggernaut holds up even in today's ADHD reader's eyes. A hint of Time Travel, so, I'm in.
20 reviews2 followers
November 5, 2020
I loved this book when I read it as a kid. The final story "Of missing persons" is sad and excellent.
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