Dan’s
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(group member since Aug 20, 2024)
Dan’s
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from the Science Fiction: The Short Stuff group.
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It is a fantasy book, not SF. A loud explosion decimates a city. All that is left of it is a black cloud of smoke. We learn this from the perspective of three sets of characters who witness this event from outside the city. It's three separate stories so far from characters in different relationships to the city.
It looks like the story will be about finding out who blew up that city, how and why. And then what these three characters are going to do about it. Scholes' writing style appeals to me. It's easy enough to understand, yet sophisticated.



I must admit I am not much on the eco story. I mean the environment has been a thing ever since the concern started in the '60s. But follower of fashion I've never been. I recognize environmentalism's importance, but that still doesn't make me particularly passionate about the subject. Melting glaciers ruining NYC somehow makes me tired verging on bored. This aspect of the story will probably be appreciated by those who appreciate the gravity of that subject more.
Still, I have to give this story as high a rating as 3.5 stars because there is a human element to bring it together that at first seemed like drama churn to me. Nevertheless, it really captures teenage boys' attitudes well. The verisimilitude of the father's situation, and then the son's, and the tragedy of it all, drew me in even though I didn't want to be.

I loved it. I'm going to have to read another Scholes story sometime soon.

The short story "Calved" is a near-future climate fiction tale about an immigrant father, Dom, who works on an iceboat harvesting freshwater from Arctic glaciers to sell to drought-stricken nations after global flooding has destroyed cities like New York. The story focuses on Dom's strained relationship with his son, Thede, who resents his long absences and struggles to connect with his father amidst this near-apocalyptic world. The narrative explores themes of loss, father-son bonds, the struggle for connection, and the emotional toll of environmental disaster.

According to Publisher's Weekly, ‘Invisible Empire of Ascending Light’ concerns a violent contest to take the place of a dying god. That's about all I could find out about it. Oh, the story was also anthologized here: https://neil-clarke.com/books/galacti.... Check out the company it's in!
I obtained the story for $2.99 by purchasing the eBook Forever Magazine, Issue 16, May 2016. But feel free to get it another way if that one is not for you. Just join us please.

95% liked this book
"I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" is a post-apocalyptic short story by American writer Harlan Ellison. It was first published in the March 1967 issue of IF: Worlds of Science Fiction.
Originally published: March 1967
Author: Harlan Ellison
Characters: Nimdok, Gorrister, Ellen, Benny, Ted, AM
Genres: Science fiction, Speculative fiction, Biography, Autobiography
Subjects: Memoir
Read and Discussion Time for Group: October 2025


At first I was a bit disappointed in one aspect of the story. They find the new arriver's journal, read it, and fail to reach the obvious conclusions all us readers instantly see. First, who would write a journal in these circumstances? That breaks the first principle of Spycraft 101. Obviously it's going to be found and read. Second, how could the readers of the journal fail to see who Hahn so obviously is?
However, by the end of the story there were enough twists that all was forgiven. At least by me. Others may have more lingering problems with these apparent plot holes.


Men get sent back in time to a penal colony that is located before even the age of dinosaurs. This far back, they can live out their lives and die affecting no one. These guys are mostly political prisoners. The fact Silverberg wrote this during the Cold Wat shows. These political prisoners seem to have Marxist, pro-Soviet leanings. One cannot write SF in a vacuum. It is inevitable that concerns of the time at writing must show through. I forgive Silverberg this minor blemish and just convert to the fact these guys are leftists.
Then someone new shows up who doesn't seem political at all, who has no news to bring back of societal developments "Up Front". What's his agenda? Honestly, I have sort of forgotten since my earlier read and look forward to rediscovering what it was.




The story is about a penal colony like Australia was, a place one could send criminals to in order to remove them from society. Only in this case the criminals are sent back in time to a period when dinosaurs ruled the Earth. There are no other humans these criminals can mess with, just themselves.
If you try to buy the novella for Kindle under the Silverberg name you won't get it. You'll get the novel instead, which although very good, is very different as well. You'll also pay at least $7.49 for that pleasure. Instead, I recommend getting the novella. It's published for Kindle in a magazine titled Forever Magazine, Issue 16, May 2016, which is available for just $2.99. I think you will find it well worth the price.

This month's short story group read selection is another audio story narrated in The Lost Si-Fi Podcast. In fact, it's the first (or earliest) one of the podcast. Check it out; the reader really does this one justice. The story itself is vintage, paranoid Dick, a version of Invasion of the Body-Snatchers. Set in the 1950s this story is so dated it has become modern, if one equates the aliens to MAGAs.

This is the first I have ever heard of this particular author. The one photo I know of that exists of him is featured on our group home page this month. He wrote approximately 60 short stories for the pulps, all but four of these published between 1953 and 1959. The other four were from 1940, 1941, 1967, and 1968. Marks had a career and writing was just something he did on the side, except perhaps for that 1950s period.
I plan to give this story a close read. It first appeared in the February 1955 issue of Imagination and has been made into a Project Gutenberg free (or very low cost) chapbook available for Kindle.

