A spaceship is found derelict, abandoned completely by its human passengers, everything still turned on. Whatever happened it was a long time ago and the salvage crew of two humans and a Chlaesan, an alien like an inverted tulip, are mystified. The sudden arrival of a Thosar ship after 12,000 years brings joy to the Chlaesan but the abject terror of the humans explains many things in “Staras Flonderans” by Kate Wilhelm. A geologist recalls the time during WWII when he was left to do field work in remote Oregon and became part of a strange fantasy involving ancient sediments, uranium and a young traumatised girl. “The Secret Place” by Richard McKenna is a whimsical tale. James Blish takes us to Saturn’s moon Titan, where astronaut Ulla is trapped when a native diaphanous cloak creature covers her suit in “How Beautiful With Banners”. When a research colony, which has been on the planet Mithras for over a hundred years, is summoned back to Earth they rebel. But the illogic of staying is inescapable: genetic trouble, environmental pressure, loss of expertise and subjugation of the less aggressive Mithrans. Only one solution remains in “The Disinherited” by Poul Anderson. Compound author Allison Rice (Jane Rice & Ruth Allison) provide a minor tale about the gremlins that bedevil everyday life in “The Loolies Are Here”, while Virginia Kidd gives us the lengthy tale of aliens who look a lot like kangaroos, who have returned to Earth in search of a colony they left here, in “Kangaroo Court”. Trouble is, their new drive has taken them 100 million years into the future and their descendants are in fact just kangaroos. The future of ophthalmology is terrifying, but students will still need to be taught accurately. Sonya Dorman’s horrific tale is one you will not soon forget! Thomas M. Disch’s “5 Eggs” has a certain mythic quality, where the alien and possibly birdlike Nyctimene leaves her human lover with her eggs for him to look after. When humans make the transition to underwater cities there will inevitably be some adjustments, as one woman finds in “The Deeps” by Keith Roberts.