Frederik George Pohl, Jr. was an American science fiction writer, editor and fan, with a career spanning over seventy years. From about 1959 until 1969, Pohl edited Galaxy magazine and its sister magazine IF winning the Hugo for IF three years in a row. His writing also won him three Hugos and multiple Nebula Awards. He became a Nebula Grand Master in 1993.
I quite enjoyed Pohl's Gateway and so picked up this cool old copy from my work's library sale. Honestly I just don't see these are worth reading. A few of the books had a haha moment or an interesting idea. However, overall weak prose, only a few interesting ideas. Gateway was written several decades after these were published in magazines so it appears his style improved.
I thoroughly enjoyed this little collection of short stories by Frederik Pohl. It's hard to believe it was published in 1957, because it has a much newer feeling to it. Indeed, it seemed to me like Pohl had been reading some Philip K Dick, because there were some plot twists that reminded me of Dick in his own short stories. I loved Pohl's anticipation of a worl in the not too distant future, much like Dick, and of the robots that were so important in his work and their interactions with our world. I'm only giving it a four of out five stars because it didn't exactly blow my mind. It was a very enjoyable read though....
I picked this book out of a box that had been packed for quite a while. I had never read it but at this point it sounded interesting. The stories, though written long ago, still hold up. They are a unique look at what the world could be headed toward.
The consuming nature of the people in the first story was particularly intriguing, where you get to work only when your status rises.
1. Midas Plague - novelette, skipped, been anthologized & read before 2. Census Taker - ditto, even more bleak 3. The Candle-Lighter - interesting Martians, told from the view of an idealistic diplomat 4. The Celebrated No-Hit Inning - funny, with time travel 5. Wapshot's Demon - ask the oracle only yes/no questions and you're still in trouble 6. My Lady Green Sleeves - novelette, longer examination of Pohl's common theme of equality vs. classes, set during a prison riot.
A reasonable collection of some of Pohl's early works (although have to cope with the fact that he doesn't write women well). The best story is The Midas Plague which is a great satire on consumerist culture.