Angel 's Reviews > The Compleat Boucher: The Complete Short Science Fiction & Fantasy of Anthony Boucher
The Compleat Boucher: The Complete Short Science Fiction & Fantasy of Anthony Boucher
by Anthony Boucher, James A. Mann
by Anthony Boucher, James A. Mann
Angel 's review
bookshelves: science_fiction
Jul 15, 11
bookshelves: science_fiction
Recommended for:
Classic science fiction fans, short story readers in general
Read from January 24 to July 15, 2011, read count: 1
This is another case of a big collection that took me a while to get through. I have been reading it on and off for a few months, which is something I often do with long anthologies like this. Having said that, this is a fine example of a science fiction classic. This volume collects the science fiction and fantasy short fiction of Anthony Boucher, who was not only a writer but also a prominent editor of Fantasy and Science Fiction magazine. The collection contains very short stories (two or three pages) and longer pieces that range from light humor fantasy to science fiction to even a little noir and pulp. This is a book to enjoy nice and slow (I rushed through it a bit at the end to catch up on the 12 Books, 12 Months Challenge I am doing. I do not recommend this. This book really deserves to be savored). One of the stories I liked was "The Compleat Werewolf," which is about a professor with a bit of a lycanthropy problem and a femme fatale more than willing to exploit that little problem. I think a strength of this book, as well as other books that NESFA has published, is that it will take you back to the golden days of science fiction. In a way, when folks say "they don't write them like this anymore," this is what they mean. And for me, I know there are some stories I will want to revisit at some point.
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Reading Progress
| 07/12/2011 | page 58 |
|
11.0% | |
| 07/05/2011 | page 53 |
|
10.0% | "Finished the "Compleat Werewolf" story. It was a bit long, but it was a nice touch of pulp, nice ending." |
| 01/27/2011 | page 7 |
|
1.0% | "Read the intro. Started the first story about St. Aquin, which reminds me a bit of _Canticle for Leibowitz_." |

