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213 pages, Paperback
First published May 12, 1970
This took me a little while to get through the book. Overall, the stories are hit-or-miss and very few stuck around in my head for any length of time. My favorite story was Schematic Man. It was a tale in conversational form, a nice short one, about a man who has transcribed his mind to computer storage with a disturbing ending. I also liked Day Million, a “love story” where the pair of lovers are only connected via a VR simulacrum of the other. One of the two would be considered transgendered. I was impressed by the progressive attitude of the story as it was first published in the 1960's.
There are also bits here-and-there that I found interesting.
The tapes had only four sounds – a “white” hiss as they entered, a five-minute 420-cycle whine for conversation, an ecstatic eep! eep! And an infrasonic drone diminishing at the end. It was the mind of the patron that put meaning into the electronic squeal, just as it was his mind that painted features on the caricature of a face and saw landscapes in the abstract play of light on the walls. [pg.65]
This passage reminds me of listening to Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Music, which I have done several times, the last time, about two weeks ago.
The colonel threw himself into a chair, breathing hard. “Later,” he said. “Oh, that roar! You have to come and hear it for yourself, Sutherland. But let me get my breath first. Grogan takes a lot out of you, you know. There’s plenty of them that can put out a dull beat, but for real emptiness there’s nobody like Grogan.” [pgs.83-84]
It Almost seems as if Pohl was predicting a combination of punk rock and hip-hop. However, that passage is from a story, Way Up Yonder, that I didn’t like very much. It’s a plantation drama with African slaves replaced with robots who practice ultrasonic voodoo in the dark while the other side in an interplanetary civil war brainwashes the leadership of this inexplicably antebellum Southern plantation planet through subliminal soundwaves hidden in transgressive music. It sounds much cooler than it was.
Which brings us to my least favorite stories. It’s a Young World, an adventure story where it follows a primitive tribesman as he avoids enemies and becomes a council member or something like that, it sucks. Under Two Moons, the last story in the book, was a future super-spy story which I just felt was blah. My least favorite story was Speed Trap. I found it uninteresting and utterly boring, I can’t even remember anything about it and I’m not going to try to refresh my memory either.
Overall, this book was okay. But I don’t think I would recommend it to anyone either, there are some interesting ideas in here but the reading experience for me was just bland.