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"A supercharged starfleet of the best in new science fiction storytelling by such masters as Harlan Ellison, Brian Aldiss, Gordon Eklund, Gregory Bendord,&more!"

252 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1976

25 people want to read

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terry-carr

2 books

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Craig.
6,353 reviews177 followers
June 6, 2020
This sixth volume of Carr's original anthology series is a pretty good one. It contains seven stories, fairly well split between well known and more obscure authors. I enjoyed Harlan Ellison's The Wine Has Been Left Open Too Long and the Memory Has Gone Flat (which has the most memorable title!), Under the Generator by John Shirley, and What Did You Do Last Year? by Gordon Eklund and Gregory Benford, and my favorite was Custer's Last Jump by Steven Utley and Howard Waldrop, which is something of a classic. It's a good, solid collection.
Profile Image for Steve Stuart.
201 reviews27 followers
August 1, 2013
As sci fi anthologies go, this one is not particularly good. Maybe that can be blamed on the time period, as much as the stories themselves. Many of these stories were award candidates, but they date from the mid-1970s, and are as dated as everything else from that decade. It's hard to take seriously any futuristic prognostications taking place among dial telephones and characters who call police "the pigs". I can't help but picture them wearing bell bottoms and Tom Selleck mustaches. Apparently progress in the future comes not so much from technology as from mystical topics such as dream interpretation and frequencies of vibration that control our behavior. Sexual trends are also extrapolated forward, so there's lots of casual, open sex. Even crystals are capable of sex in the future. Many of the stories go a bit overboard in their experimental structure, as well. There are sadistic ravings of an insane disembodied brain, a completely impenetrable record of an apparent schizophrenic's perceptions of mind control, and an inexplicable alternate history (told via dry history books) of a Civil War in which not only had motorized flight been invented 60 years early, but Plains Indians were flying the planes.
Profile Image for Erik Graff.
5,167 reviews1,459 followers
July 20, 2010
Hundreds of these collections of science fiction and/or fantasy stories seem to be published yearly, Terry Carr being one of the prominent editors of such things.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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