I was very excited about this anthology when I stumbled across it on Amazon. It pains me to say that by and large, the stories in here are quite sub-par, and after reading this I am relieved that I didn't back the project on Kickstarter. Instead, I spent only $7 for the Kindle version. Even that seems a little steep for what amounts to two decent stories out of thirteen. The best story by far was written by the guy who compiled the anthology, Betancourt.
I have not heard of these other authors before, but a cursory search for them on Goodreads shows that most have at least a few publications under their belt, a lot of them novelizations of films/shows, and they should be capable of producing better work than what we see here. All I can imagine is that most of them found themselves pressed to whip up a short for this anthology in a few hours, somehow. I find myself saying this a lot, but I have legitimately seen better fanfiction than what is compiled in this collection. This effect is compounded by the fact that this anthology essentially is fanfiction. Unlike what you would see on FF.net or AO3, however, many of these authors seem to care very little for Campbell's story. Most of these shorts miss the themes of "Who Goes There?" (paranoia, claustrophobia, mysterious lovecraftian implications) entirely, a good chunk seem to have absolutely nothing to do with the inspiring work whatsoever.
Here are some examples of what I mean:
- One story is set far into the future, with a crew compiled of aliens from a variety of races, including humans. They are trying to travel into a black hole and there's this metallic, orb-like alien that serves as their guide. It can sense black holes somehow. It starts going crazy because the humans onboard have an orchestra that plays a few times a week and this orb doesn't know how to process music. The captain comes to realize the alien might be intentionally steering them off course. The end.
- In one short, our POV character is an alien from a dying race, come to see if earth would be suitable for their survival and if they can live alongside humans peacefully. He seems to be living in some sort of makeshift hut and bears no resemblance to The Thing. He observes humans on an expedition to drill for some element in the Arctic, watching them spill oil over penguins and seals with comical glee. He's captured, rescued by a sympathetic human, they talk about how much humanity sucks.
Apart from being poor in concept, most of these stories are poor in execution as well. Rough, amateurish prose with awkward sentences and scene; paper thin characters; bad dialogue; and the entire anthology is riddled with misspellings and grammar mistakes.
Would have been one star, but for the two decent stories in there. Not recommended, even for fans of The Thing or "Who Goes There?"