I've read about 10 Orbits (out of publication order), and after this one, I'm going to take a long break from them. Sad fact is that most of them just weren't much good. Knight had a taste for what was called New Wave, where stories didn't make much sense.
This Orbit contained some of the best and worst stories of the series that I've read so far. This time around, Knight published more novellas, leading to less than the usual dozen selections. One of the novellas is brilliant -- "Grimm's Story" by Verner Vinge, which nods and winks at sci-fi and fantasy fiction magazines. Another, about the Supreme Court, winds up being more embarrassing than anything else, since the real history of the Supreme Court became so far removed from the ideal shown here.
Knight did short introductions to each story, but would soon stop that, perhaps because he basically published the same authors again and again.
Selections:
* "Windsong" by Kate Wilhelm/Mrs. Damon Knight. Typical bullshit from the wife. If it wasn't for hubby, she'd have been a failed writer, which is what she deserved to be.
* "Probable Cause" by Charles L. Harness. This Supreme Court novella, set in 1984, goes on far too long, and shows a lot of the 1960s sci-fi tropes of clairvoyance, other psychic powers, ghosts, Presidential assassinations and manned voyages to Mars. It is sad to think that anyone once thought that Supreme Court justices couldn't be bought, and actually cared about their jobs.
* "Shattered Like a Glass Goblin" by Harlan Ellison. Unlike some of Ellison's whacked-out titles, there really is a glass goblin here. Very creepy love story ... which reminds me most of what someone once said about Pink Floyd co-founder Syd Barrett, "He flew too close to the sun."
* "The Corruptible" by Jacob Transue. There isn't an introduction by Knight for this story, leading me to believe Transue might be a pen name, perhaps for Knight himself. A rich man tracks down an old scientist who seems to've found the fountain of youth. Predictable and full of plot holes.
* "Animal" by Carol Emschwiller. The Animal is a caveman, possibly Neanderthal. He's captured and sent to an exhibit at a city park. He eventually learns to write. It's a bizarre sketch of a parable ... but a parable about what is unclear. The story takes place in 1969 ... in an alternate universe, presumably.
* "One at a Time" by R. A. Lafferty. Once again, Lafferty proves to be an overrated hack.
* "Passengers" by Robert Silverberg. Although imaginative, the story suffers from being set in December 1987. I was a freshman in community college then. Sadly, I don't remember any helpful Central Computer, electric vehicles, instant purple hangover cures, or invisible parasites that take over your body.
* "Grimm's Story" by Verner Vinge. This the best novella published in the 10 or so Orbits that I've read. There is complex world-building here, including new sciences and new species, but it is understandable. There is even a popular magazine called Fantasie, which has been around for 700 years. Great stuff.
* "A Few Last Words" by James Sallis. Poorly written, convoluted end of civilization story, punctuated by a speeding car killing the last dog in town. Fuck you, Sallis.