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Stellar #1

Stellar

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Remember the story that first turned you on to science fiction and perhaps made you a fan for life? Who, if anyone, is writing fiction--especially short fiction--like that now? And where is it being published?

Science fiction should be fun...should offer some of that sense of wonder and achievement we used to expect as a matter of course. And that is what the Stellar series is all about.

This first volume showcases superior short stories by the major writers in the field--with each story in print here for the first time anywhere.

238 pages, Paperback

First published August 12, 1974

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Judy-Lynn del Rey

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Olethros.
2,724 reviews535 followers
October 20, 2018
-Normalito y menos, en general.-

Género. Relatos.

Lo que nos cuenta. El libro Umbral cósmico (publicación original: Stellar 1, 1974) es una antología de relatos de ciencia ficción (dos menos en la versión en español que en la original) seleccionados por Judy-Lynn del Rey que nos permitirán conocer, entre otros, ciertos problemas con la pesca, las consecuencias de dos desplazamientos temporales de naturaleza muy diferente o la influencia de una reliquia de las guerras de otros tiempos sobre un imperio.

¿Quiere saber más de este libro, sin spoilers? Visite:

https://librosdeolethros.blogspot.com...
Profile Image for Craig.
6,416 reviews180 followers
January 8, 2021
This is the first in a series of original anthologies edited by Judy-Lynn Benjamin del Rey in which she solicited stories that she felt would appeal both to old-time readers who were searching for the "sense-of-wonder" they found in the stories from their youth, and also to readers who had found the field during the "New Wave" era and wanted convincingly drawn characters and a literary flavor. She was pretty successful in this book, which included good stories from old-timers like Hal Clement, Milton A. Rothman, and Hal Clement along with newer writers like Vernor Vinge, Alan Dean Foster, and R.A. Lafferty. I enjoyed all of the stories, particularly those by Gordon R. Dickson, Robert Silverberg, and Larry Niven.
Profile Image for Monica.
822 reviews
June 25, 2016
En la entrega sexta de relatos de ciencia ficción de Caralt, nos encontramos con una recopilación en la que el punto en común de vista es el origen del universo y los cambios evolutivos en el ser humano, las especies y los pensamientos.

La mayoría de los relatos que componen el volumen son bastante flojos, cosa bastante rara, tratándose de una antología que suele destacar por su nivel cualitativo medio; que es más que correcto.


Cómo mejores historias, destaco:

-Entre dos galaxias (Por ser divertida y algo surrealista, a extremos psicodélicos – festivos, además de una de las más originales que hay en la recopilación)
-Twig (por ser la mejor historia del volumen, claramente. Bien redactada, clásica en estilo y forma, elegante, con mensaje y fondo)

Paso a relatar el argumento y mi impresión acerca de cada uno de ellos:


1/ EL CILINDRO DEL VIVERO DE ABEDULES (Clifford D. Simak):
Los miembros de un instituto privado de investigaciones científicas, entre ellas espacio- temporales, se reúnen a causa del hallazgo de un dispositivo de flujo temporal en una de sus dependencias científicas exteriores del campus, ya que alrededor aparecen y desaparecen objetos de forma misteriosa.

RELATO IRÓNICO - CRÍTICO Y REALISTA, QUE PRETENDE ABARCAR LAS POSIBLES DILUCIDACIONES DE CIENTÍFICOS TEÓRICOS QUE SE AÚN NO HAN TENIDO PRÁCTICA EN EL CAMPO DEL VIAJE TEMPORAL. Además, DE SU RENDIMIENTO UNA VEZ TRABAJADO DICHO APARATO HALLADO, POR CUALIDAD.
ESTA BIEN, PERO ALGO DESFADADO, SOBRETODO EN CUANTO A ORIGINALIDAD EN SU RESOLUCIÓN.

2/REINCIDENCIA SOSPECHOSA (Larry Niven):
Un hombre que has pasado 26 años en el espacio vuelve a su hogar. Cuando retorna allí, bajo los comandos de la Ulises para hacerse rico e investigar mundos, debe lidiar con los temibles agujeros negros y con las fatales consecuencias temporales de ciertas acciones...

RELATO ESENCIALMENTE TEMPORAL QUE INTENTA TENER LA ESENCIA DE LOS DE HEINLEIN (bucle reincidente TEMPORAL), EN LO TOCANTE A COMPLEJIDAD Y ENREVERSAMIENTO, PERO QUE QUEDA EN APRENDIZ DE MAESTRO, AUNQUE SEA NIVEN EL AUTOR.
ESTÁ BIEN, PERO NO COMO PRIMERA OPCIÓN DE TEMÁTICA; CREO QUE QUEDA CLARO.

3/ ENTRE DOS GALAXIAS(Robert Silverberg):
Un hombre común a bordo de un avión por motivos profesionales, sueña con una galaxia y viaje paralelo, completamente distinto, mientras realiza el trayecto.

RELATO TÍPICO DEL AUTOR. QUE SE SIRVE DE EXCUSA PARA DAR SU PARTICULAR VISION ACERCA DE LA SOCIEDAD, EL COSMOS, LA POBLACIÓN Y EL DESARROLLO, O SUBDESARROLLO, SEGÚN SE VEA. CÓMO NO PODÍA SER DE OTRO MODO, LA HISTORIA SIRVE DE EXCUSA PARA UN FESTIVAL DE SEXO Y DROGAS , MUY TÍPICO EN ÉL. DIVERTIDO EN CIERTA MANERA Y DIFERENTE.... PSICODÉLICA.
ME HA GUSTADO.

4/ EL MILAGRO DE LOS PECES(Alan Dean Foster):
En una galaxia que se antoja desconocida para el lector, por la incertidumbre ambiental, su población tiene serios problemas de abastecimiento para la pesca en el mar. La nieta de uno de los principales pescadores, le da la solución perfecta.

RELATO INTRASCENDENTE PARA TODO AMANTE DEL GÉNERO, POR TOCAR ESENCIALMENTE BIOLOGÍA, SIN NINGÚN AÑADIDO MÁS QUE LO HAGA FASCINANTE O ADICTIVO E INNOVADOR EN LECTURA.
NO ESTÁ MAL

5/ LA PEONZA DEL TIEMPO(Vernor Vinge):
Una Nave de la República imperial con el príncipe a bordo, busca hallar nuevas GALAXIAS que conquistar, mientras que en el planeta regente es asaltada una estación de vigilancia, dando creación a una nueva estrella....pero no tardará en aparecer otra pronto.

RELATO CON FONDO DE SCI FI QUE TRATA LAS CONSECUENCIAS DE EXPLORAR LO DESCONOCIDO MEDIANTE LA AMBICIÓN.
ESTÁ BIEN.

6/ MR. HAMADRIADA (R.A. LAFERTY):
En la isla de Pascua, el narrador del relato, unido a un grupo de tertulia científica, conoce a un Sociólogo, extraño, cautivador con sus ideas acerca del cambio de tornas evolutivo del planeta. Cinco años después, lo comprobará de primera mano.

CURIOSO RELATO ACERCA DEL MOVIMIENTO DE LAS DISTINTAS MASAS DE TIERRA, EL ORIGEN DE ÉSTAS Y ACERCA DE AMOS Y ESCLAVOS...EL ETERNO HUEVO Y GALLINA.
ESTÁ BIEN.

7/ TWIG (Gordon R. Dickson):
Twig es la única humana del planeta vivo Jinson, rodeado de un ecosistema inteligentes q captan las sensaciones y mensajes. La chica ha sido criada por el gran vegetal, el árbol jefe de inteligencia máxima de ése astro. Ella es una excelente comunicadora intangible, pues. Cuando un grupo de ecólogos del gobierno Para planetario llega allí para investigar si hay emisiones nocivas en sus transmisiones, el planeta corre un sería amenaza. Twig, entonces, se dará cuenta del porqué de muchas causas y de su auténtica misión en la vida.

BONITO RELATO, MUY ATMOSFÉRICO ( CON MENSAJE Y ENTIDAD PROFÉTICA INCLUIDO), QUE TRATA LOS VALORES MORALES Y CIVILES, ACERCA DEL DESCONOCIMIENTO DE CAUSA DE ENTIDADES ALIENAS A NOSOTROS, DEL PRINCIPIO Y DEL FIN Y DEL CICLO CONTINUO DE LA VIDA, EL FLUJO E IMPORTANCIA DE ÉSTE.
ME HA GUSTADO.
48 reviews
October 14, 2025
*Stellar 1* edited by Judy-Lynn del Rey, 7/10

A fairly weak anthology, though it's saved by a few bangers. Judy-Lynn's introduction implies the anthology is intended to recapture Golden Age wonder which apparently was lost in the too-literary New Wave 1970s. This mission statement is belied however by the contents. The stories lack a unifying theme, running the gamut from plodding no-nonsense Golden Age yarns ("The Birch Clump Cylinder," "Fusion," "The Logical Life") to experimental/New Wave works ("Schwartz Between the Galaxies," "Mr. Hamadryad"). The one common denomination is all were first published in this anthology, which may be to its detriment: the authors may not have been putting their best foot forward.

"The Birch Clump Cylinder," by Clifford D. Simak, 5/10: My first Simak. A time travel story which feels like it could have been written in the 1940s. Simak tries to develop his characters in the thirty pages, but it's fairly boring, and no one acts like a real person. The twist was way too telegraphed. So telegraphed in fact I anticipated an ancillary twist which never landed.

"Fusion," by Milton A. Rothman, 3/10. Barely a story. Rothman even explains at the end it's a slightly fictionalized account of his experiments in nuclear fusion. Lots of long descriptions of complex equipment, scientific readings, techno-jargon, magnetic coils and particle collisions and what have you. It's interesting in its hopefulness. The story ends with a successful fusion breakthrough, with Rothman seeming to believe cheap unlimited energy is just around the corner. Fifty years later, we're still waiting.

"A Miracle of Small Fishes," by Alan Dean Foster, 6/10. A cute story about a little Mexican girl wishing her fisherman grandfather could catch sardines just one last time. But alas, sardines are all grown in artificial fisheries to the north.

"The Whirlygig of Time," by Vernor Vinge, 8/10. A story set centuries after the Soviet Union wins WWIII. A strong early work from Vinge, with elements (the underestimated underdog, a long-game revenge) he would later explore in *A Deepness in the Sky.*

"Schwartz Between the Stars," by Robert Silverberg, 4/10. A strange story too dated to land right. A 22nd century anthropologist is bored that the world is a perfect neo-liberal utopia where there's no war or poverty and everywhere is just like the United States. What's an anthropologist to do when there's no stone age natives with bones through their noses? To alleviate his ennui, he fantasizes about riding a cosmopolitan starship across a space opera universe brimming with fantastic alien life. The implicit expectation that the world would undergo a homogeneous "everywhere will be just like America" transformation feels really boomery in light of our current day and age. The protagonist's whining annoys, and that half the page counr is just silly daydreaming makes it all pointless. It's very well written, but the thesis has aged like milk.

"Mr. Hamadryad," by R. A. Lafferty, 5/10. The Age of the Monkey is coming to an end to make way for the Age of the Cat. A weird story about Easter Island migrating across the ocean and felines developing psychokinesis (and cats apparently built the Easter Island statues, and the pyramids). Surreal. Heavily Biblical vibes. The story is told via a protagonist (who sells coconuts) randomly every few years running into a mysterious Mr. Hamadryad, who cryptically relates the coming catastrophie. Eerie and hard to describe. It's told in the form of almost a fable. The story was fascinating in its weirdness, but failed to resonate. I don't know at all what Lafferty was trying to say.

"Singularities Make Me Nervous," by Larry Niven, 6/10. Niven was just fresh off writing *World Out of Time," and must've had Bussard Ramjets/black holes on the brain. NASA astronaut concocts a scheme to use a black hole to fly his starship backwards in time and make a killing on the stock market. Amusing, but makes little sense (How the hell can you *sneak* a ramjet into the Solar System from interstellar space? The deceleration plume would be a years-long literal beacon in the sky). Feels hammered out on the quick.

"The Logical Life," by Hal Clement, 8/10. I liked this a lot. Similar to *Mission of Gravity* the story involves an human explorer on an unusual alien world. This one is a sunless rogue planet with ammonia oceans. I like how his aliens are ultimately reasonable people who happen to say, look like four-legged pyramids.

"Twig," by Gordon R. Dickson, 10/10. Favorite of the bunch. With little tweaking, this could be a western. The story involves a young girl, Twig, on a colonized world, and she was raised by the "Plant-Grandfather," a sapient tree network spanning the planet's continent. The settlers want to hunt down and burn Grandfather, and Twig must find a place in her changing circumstances. Deeper than I expected, and I finished wanting to read more Dickson.
Profile Image for Robert.
875 reviews2 followers
January 11, 2026
A collection from 1974 that demonstrates the changes in sci-fi short story tone and artistry since then. Truly a blast from the past.
Profile Image for Charles.
Author 41 books289 followers
July 31, 2009
The first in this series of SF anthologies. Again, there are good writers but none of the titles strike up any fond memories. I'm suspecting this is the new SF, which tried to be more literate at a loss to the adventure side of the coin. two and a half stars.
315 reviews1 follower
Read
June 27, 2017
A good collection of Short Stories. Had fun reading them. Hope the rest of the series is just as good.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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