Shinichi Hoshi (Japanese: 星新一) is recognized as one of Japan's most influential science fiction writers of all time, He published more than 1,000 of his signature "short-short" stories. Some call his crisp, no-frills prose the "Haiku of Science Fiction."
As with the previous Shinichi Hoshi's books I've read, this is a funny and full of imagination compilation of short stories, some of them hilarious (like the last one), and some of them that will make the reader think (like the one about the death penalty on Mars) and some that are a little bit of both. Hoshi, again, shows a knack for the sci-fi and humor, and is able to deliver on all kind of different set ups, never becoming boring.
However, after more than 100 of his stories, a sense of repetition started to set on me while reading this book, a sense of having-been-here, having-read-that. Maybe because I expected the book to surprise and entertain me as much as the first two, and maybe because the compilation is not as good as in the other two volumes, I don't feel the stories that form part of "ようこそ地球さん" are as good as some of his other short stories.
Hoshi could be great. But here he is just entertaining (apart from a couple of really good ones).