Ten fascinating explorations beyond infinity. The Moon has been reached, the dreamer must now broaden his horizons. Our Solar System remains, but this is too limited for dreams that insist on no boundaries...The writers represented in this imaginative anthology go well beyond the dream and speculate on a future still veiled behind the curtain of outer space. Some day, man will draw the curtain aside, but for now he has the universe, the galaxy, and the stars around us.
Contents:
Introduction (The Stars Around Us) • essay by Robert Hoskins The Peddler's Nose • [Quarantine] • (1951) • shortstory by Jack Williamson The Listeners • [The Listeners] • (1968) • novelette by James E. Gunn Ghost Fleet • (1961) • shortstory by Christopher Anvil Fondly Fahrenheit • (1954) • novelette by Alfred Bester With Redfern on Capella XII • (1955) • novelette by Frederik Pohl [as by Charles Satterfield ] Underfollow • (1963) • shortstory by John Jakes The Feeling of Power • (1958) • shortstory by Isaac Asimov The Helping Hand • (1950) • novelette by Poul Anderson A Work of Art • (1956) • novelette by James Blish The Great Slow Kings • (1963) • shortstory by Roger Zelazny
There was something of a notion in the wake of the first Apollo moon landing that perhaps the real world had caught up with science fiction at last, and that the field had become passe. With this in mind, Hoskins assembled this anthology of stories from the 1950s and early '60s to illustrate just how limitless the possibilities were that remained to be explored. My favorites are Roger Zelazny's The Great Show Kings, James E. Gunn's The Listeners, and Alfred Bester's Fondly Farenheit, but perhaps the best story is The Feeling of Power by Isaac Asimov, one of his best, which is perhaps even more relevant today than when it was first published in 1957. The feeling to which the title refers comes from the idea that people can do mathematical equations with their brains and pencil and paper rather than by asking their computers for the answer.
Classic science fiction short stories. Fun to read but most are completely forgettable. The one excellent contribution is Isaac Asimov's "The Feeling of Power" about a militarized society in the future rediscovering that humans can do calculations. Also deserving of special mention, James Blish's "A Work of Art" aboiut a reincarnation of Richard Strauss.
I've only been picking it up here and there, like today I read a story from Azimov that makes you think of ways humans and machines interact with each other, and presents another way for things to go terribly bad when they were hoping it was for good. Everything in moderation I suppose.