Jesse’s Reviews > 100 Years of Science Fiction > Status Update
Jesse
is 35% done
Finished the seventh story, the last in the section about Aliens. This one's by Gordon R. Dickson, an author I know next to nothing about. It was the first really disposable story of the bunch. At least, it didn't particularly speak to ME. But it was still thought-provoking, and certainly enjoyable enough.
— Mar 10, 2025 12:07PM
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Jesse
is finished
Finished the last story, The Voices of Time, by JG Ballard. It's hard to believe, but I think this might be the first Ballard I've ever read. This short story was ambitious. I think there might have been a few more ideas crammed into 31 pages than would really fit, but I can't bring myself to dislike it. Fascinating, hallucinatory, philosophical, and weird.
— Apr 01, 2025 10:21AM
Jesse
is 95% done
The penultimate story is Clarke's The Nine Billion Names of God. I really haven't read much Clarke. Only The Sentinel, which is the short story that became 2001: A Space Odyssey. This is ... y'know, fine. It definitely had that '1960's anthology sci-fi' feel. Not the most original story, and I didn't love it, but I really haven't sampled this author's work enough to get a true feel.
— Apr 01, 2025 08:16AM
Jesse
is 90% done
Finished The Quest for St. Aquin, by Thomas Boucher. This one's interesting. A somber story about religion, soul, faith, human frailty, & AI, its smartly written. However, it has a character that's a robot donkey, & they call it the 'robass', and that's so ridiculous it's hard to concentrate. Unintentional hilarity hurts the tone. Wasn't 'ass' in use to mean butt by the 60s? This was thought, and chuckle, provoking.
— Apr 01, 2025 07:41AM
Jesse
is 85% done
Got through the next story, Business as Usual, During Alterations, by Ralph Williams. Alarmingly prophetic. Like a lot of these. This is a great example of science-fiction-as-economic-philosophy, and will be of particular interest to Star Trek fans, because it discusses the implications of one of their most signature pieces of technology, the replicator.
— Mar 31, 2025 01:29PM
Jesse
is 80% done
Finished the next story, Splice of Life, by Sonya Dorman. A pretty forward-thinking 1964 story about medical science. This is a really interesting anthology.
— Mar 31, 2025 11:19AM
Jesse
is 75% done
The next story is 'The Equalizer', by Norman Spinrad, whose bio painted him as a decidedly utopian storyteller. I almost wish I hadn't known that going in, but it didn't hamper my enjoyment of the story. A fine little tale about the morality of war.
— Mar 31, 2025 10:43AM
Jesse
is 70% done
The section I just began, on new inventions, is kicked off by a little story by Ambrose Bierce, a humorist/philosopher/author I keep TRYING to get into but never getting around to it (which is a great thing about anthologies), and it's barely a story. It reads like a joke. Clocking in at less than 2 pages, it's a fun little think-piece.
— Mar 31, 2025 10:32AM
Jesse
is 65% done
Finished the 13th story, 'Nobody Bothers Gus,' by Algis Budrys. This, coming out in 1955, is arguably an early example of that most favorite of my favored micro-genres, the post-modern superhero story.
— Mar 28, 2025 07:08AM
Jesse
is 60% done
The next story is 'The Mindworm', by CM Kornbluth, a grisly little spook story that does a great job of straddling the line between modernist sci-fi and gothic horror. Reminds me of Neil Gaiman at his best, blending folklore with a straightforward, comic-book-style supervillain. Great fun.
— Mar 21, 2025 06:15PM
Jesse
is 55% done
Just read the story I grabbed this analogy for, What Ever Happened to Cpl. Cuckoo, by Gerald Kersh (1954). Apparently, it finds its way into League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. I can see how, Cpl. Cuckoo IS a superhero, of sorts. The writing style reminded me a little of Roald Dahl's short subject work.
— Mar 14, 2025 12:22PM

