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This anthology contains: First Contact by Murray Leinster; Intelligence Test by Harry Walton; The Large Ant by Howard Fast; What's He Doing in There? by Fritz Leiber; Chemical Plant by Ian Williamson; Limiting Factor by Clifford D. Simak; The Fire Balloons by Ray Bradbury; Invasion from Mars by Howard Koch; The Gentle Vultures by Isaac Asimov; Knock by Fredric Brown; Specialist by Robert Sheckley; and Lost Memory by Peter Phillips. First Contact by Murray Leinster won the Hugo Award for best novelette in 1946, presented in 1996.

176 pages, Paperback

First published May 1, 1963

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Noel Keyes

3 books1 follower

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5 stars
15 (46%)
4 stars
9 (28%)
3 stars
6 (18%)
2 stars
1 (3%)
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1 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Lewis Szymanski.
416 reviews30 followers
July 21, 2021
I don't know who Noel Keyes is, but he did A good job picking stories for this anthology. It's too bad that this is the only anthology he edited. The very little bit I could find out about him online was from ISFDB. Noel Keyes was a pen name, his real name was David Noel Keightley.
Profile Image for Avi Baron.
9 reviews
February 17, 2021
Possibly the best book I've ever read. Sad I gave it away. Trying to buy it again.
Profile Image for Mortimer Roxbrough.
91 reviews3 followers
February 22, 2017
Done in refreshing ways and with ultimate style, this collection is quite possibly the best anthology on the subject that I have ever read.
verdict: Unmissable, don't!
1,071 reviews9 followers
April 13, 2024
I was in the mood for some short stories.. this collection actually maintains it stated theme throughout.. 1/2 the book is first contact stories with 'man the discoverer' and the 2nd half 'man the discovered'.

The stories are all from the the early fifties, and is quite an all-star roster. There are a few classic ones that I've read before elsewhere.

First Contact by Murray Leinster is one of my favorites... the perfectly dated cold-war era first contact story. Both the human and alien captain assume they have to kill each other to keep their planets safe until on crew member comes up with a unique plan. There's also 'What's he doing in there?' by Fritz Leiber, which is a very short cute story that makes a great point about people understanding one another. 'Knock' by Frederic Brown is another classic one that can be found here.. with the famous start. 'The last man on Earth sat alone in a room. There was a knock on the door...'

Among those I hadn't read before, Asimov's 'Gentle Vultures' was great..an alien race hangs out on the moon waiting for Earth to destroy itself.. only we don't.. yet. 'Specialist' by Robert Sheckley and 'Lost Memory' by Peter Phillips were both really unique and interesting takes on first contacts with similar aliens but very different results.

Just what I need to get over a bit of readers block!
Profile Image for Chris.
108 reviews3 followers
June 24, 2021
Mostly good stories but kind of hit or miss though. I kind of like that some of these are super unknown and it is not all "classics". Really shows where the genre was in that era.
Profile Image for Don.
686 reviews
April 5, 2023
A few of the stories included here were in other collections I have read.

Interesting angles.
Profile Image for Joseph DeBolt.
183 reviews13 followers
October 30, 2018
Entertaining collection of stories. Includes the story Orson Welles used for his October 1939 Mercury Theater broadcast --almost word-for-word if memory serves. "Intelligence Test" by Harry Walton is a good thought problem. I can see it as a Twilight Zone episode. "What's He Doing In There?" by Fritz Leiber is great; funny.
Profile Image for Tim.
537 reviews
August 24, 2012
Great, imaginative stories from the golden age of SF
Profile Image for J.R. Gershen-Siegel.
Author 12 books20 followers
April 24, 2014
I just love this book. Every now and then there's a less than wonderful story in here, but the great ones more than make up for it.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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