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The Dimension Scales and Other Stories

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“A theory emerged, with testable predictions, and there, like a candy apple, hung the omega symbol that unlocked it all. He knew what he needed to do...”

Reminiscent of Rod Serling’s “The Twilight Zone” and Roald Dahl’s TALES OF THE UNEXPECTED, Garry Abbott’s THE DIMENSION SCALES AND OTHER STORIES is a collection of fourteen short speculative fictions. THE DIMENSION SCALES is based around themes of malevolent and secret authorities, metamorphosis, survival and projections of contemporary fears into near-future realities.

From worlds inhabited by murderous animals, inept time travellers and clandestine, suburban social experiments—to the sentience, love and moral awakenings of artificial intelligences—THE DIMENSION SCALES invites you to explore the twists and perils of extraordinary moments in disturbingly familiar universes, linked together by one devastating epiphany:

“Something happened, and the world splintered...”

Watch the Book Trailer here .

188 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 22, 2014

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15 people want to read

About the author

Garry Abbott

6 books10 followers
Garry Abbott is a science fiction author from Staffordshire in the UK where he lives with his wife, daughter and two cats.

Garry has published the short story collection 'The Dimension Scales and Other Stories', the space opera novel: 'The Great Connection: Worlds in Waiting' and most recently, the sci-fi comedy 'Transported'.

As well as writing science fiction, Garry has regularly contributed topical comedy sketches for the BBC and produced scripts for community arts productions and performances.

Garry's influences include Isaac Asimov, Philip K. Dick, Ursula K. Le Guin, Terry Pratchett, Douglas Adams, Philip Pullman, George R. R. Martin and Dennis Potter.

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Richard.
Author 1 book58 followers
May 11, 2015
Although I love short stories, it can be difficult to rate a whole collection - particularly when you've got one as varied as this. The Dimension Scales may be getting three stars on my (admittedly pretty stingy) rating system, but there are several stories here which taken individually would get a five. 'The Next Level', for instance, is a claustrophobically tense interrogation, played out in total darkness and originally written as a radio script, which I can imagine sounding brilliant on BBC Radio Four. 'Scalp' could hardly be more different: a light, almost cartoonlike, but wonderfully strange horror story. And finally, there's 'Cry Again Army', my favourite of the fourteen and as good a twist on the theme of cryogenics as I've read - a super story with a real depth of both characters and ideas.

The writing itself is as clear as day; along the way we meet a stranded time traveller, sentient machines, experiments, robots and watch the rest of the animal kingdom taking its revenge on genocidal humans. The book also begins with a Preface in which Abbott explains, not only its origins, but also that the stories are linked: there are images, ideas and names which reverberate from one to another - with one of the fourteen (not telling you which) being the source of all the rest.

Cumulatively, the effect is a surreal mix of science fiction, creepiness and the quirky - really enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Mark.
438 reviews9 followers
September 5, 2014
The Dimension Scales and Other Stories
Author: Garry Abbott
Publisher: Amazon Digital Services
Published In: N/A
Date: 2013
Pgs: 188

REVIEW MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS

Summary:
14 tales of speculative fiction. 14 tales wandering the myriad dimensions of time, space, authority, metamorphosis, survival, and fear. The future is coming, always coming, but never arriving. Worlds beyond man, lost time travellers, societal experimentation.

Something happened, and the world splintered...

Genre:
Adventure
Apocalypse
Autobiography and memoir
Disaster
End of the World
Fantasy
Fiction
Horror
Pulp
Science fiction
Short stories
Survivalist
Thrillers
Urban fantasy

Why this book:
Was offered to me in exchange for a review...how can I resist a free book. I love books. Books, books, books...especially if they come across as interesting in the first place.


The Diary of Derek Froggat, The Accidental Time-Traveller:
The Feel:
There is a desperation to this story as Derek realizes that he may be trapped forever in a time when everyone thinks him mad.

Favorite Scene:
When he begins to have a conscience about whether or not the Lord of the Manor, who basically has him prisoner, would take the future information that he gives him and warp history into a horror all his own.

Pacing:
Quick/

Hmm Moments:
When he believes that he is being drawn on through time and tries to hurry notes about Hitler, Bin Laden, and Stalin into his diary, just in case someone finds it and can do something about it.

Casting call:
I could see John McNairy as Derek Froggart.

Black Swarm:
Character I Most Identified With:
Mark, convincing himself that what he saw was impossible. No way did a man-sized Ant Queen come out from behind his refrigerator and talk to him. No way.

The Feel:
Ants...a huge ant mound behind the fridge...and inviting one of your boys over for beer and doing something about the ants while the wife is out of town. Definitely one of the odder setups to a sci fi story that I’ve ever seen.

Favorite Scene:
The last scene. Woof!

Pacing:
Well paced.

Hmm Moments:
Very opening scene of the Walking Dead there at the end.

Casting call:
Maybe this could be the next vehicle for Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill.

Love in the Shell:
Least Favorite Character:
Henny and her older sister jealousy because the baby is getting away with stuff rings like every damn argument between siblings had by yelling at their parents about it that I’ve listened to my entire life. Blah. Bet she yells “it’s not fair” before long.

Plot Holes/Out of Character:
I believe that Laura would have went scorched earth on her sister’s big secret and on her cousin’s invasion of her privacy even under the veil of the intervention.

Hmm Moments:
How intelligent a bot is Adam? Is he “the first of his kind” and looking for his Eve? Just a thought.

Casting call:
Emma Stone as Henny would be awesome.

Ellen Page as Laura.

Would love to see the two of them play off of each other in this tension filled intervention episode.

Cry Again Army:
Least Favorite Character:
Quentin Pike, spoiled rich brat, and his parents, Ted and Jess Pike, enabler.

The Feel:
There’s a end of the world feel, but there’s also a hoax feel. Like a French Revolution decapitating the rich without actually drawing blood, just scaring them all into suspended animation. Course, that doesn’t account for the biohazard being released in Pyongyang.

Hmm Moments:
The Pikes bought Miss Berber, through coercion, like a toy for Quentin, first to homeschool him and, then, to be his adult plaything as he matured, his wife even.

Victoria’s revenge and that of the people of Earth is well done.

...But what happened next?


The Drawing Room:
Didn’t think much of this one. As a one off short horror piece, it was fine. But there wasn’t enough to it for me. Better if it would have revealed that he was in the room for 20 or 30 minutes while the staff went to lunch. It’s a very Saw kind of thing. Just wish it was longer.

The Dimension Scales:
Favorite Character:
Simba the cat

Hmm Moments:
Okay...that’s good flash fiction. Not really flash fiction, definitely more than 100 words, but a good short. Good Twilight Zone-y twist.


Alex, Boudicca, and Benny the Bear:
Hmm Moments:
When AIs start moving themselves around from storage unit to storage unit, what will they need us for?


Animals Attack: parts I to IV:
The Feel:
Best one of the lot so far.

Favorite Scene:
The actress being attacked by her poodle as she carries it like an accessory down Hollywood Boulevard.

The wave of cats attacking all the humans on a single floor of a hotel in Spain. Slashing and biting in their hundreds, driving some of the humans to leap from balconies to try and make the attacks stop while others tried to escape other ways. Some of them falling to the horde.

Love the talking head discounting the eyewitnesses getting his from his cocker spaniel.

Pacing:
Great pacing.

Hmm Moments:
The animals revenge on Man. Excellent.

The Stadium of Light. Sounds like the animal attack has forced Man into a unified religious awakening, almost cultish. But survivable.

Where Vaughn is leading his group of survivors is genius considering who and what the attackers are. Course, it would probably be a helluva fight to get in and set it up as a human survivor outpost.

Why isn’t there a screenplay?
This one could make a movie, absolutely.

Casting call:
Nicole Beharie would be awesome as Leticia Coveney. Maybe Charles Dutton as her father, Vaughn.

For Dr. Shamsi, the CMO of the Stadium of Light, maybe Alexander Siddig.

The Next Level:

The Feel:
Very claustrophobic. The predicament that Gerry finds himself in is horrible. But who are these people? What do they want? Are they even there?

Hmm Moments:
Good twist, bit predictable, but good.

Makes you wonder what kind of country they live in.


Newsbot Serial One:
Favorite Character:
Maverick Jefferson getting bit by his dog...so to speak.

The Feel:
Prophetic.

Pacing:
This one should have been longer in its 1984ism.

Hmm Moments:
The corporate ownership and guidance of the news media is increasing in America. This story is right on in that respect.


The Beep Next Door:
Least Favorite Character:
The beep is a character in its own right. The annoying beep that happens every so many seconds and breaks your concentration. And, then, as you try to get on with it, you anticipate the next annoying interruption, thereby, breaking your concentration before it happens the next time.


Scalp:
Favorite Character:
The Old Man...the creepy Old Man.

Favorite Scene:
The pineapple garden revelation is creepy. Don’t mess with the old man’s pineapples.

Hmm Moments:
Reminds me of the Night Gallery episode with the little old lady that the banker shows up to evict and in the process cuts her finger off. And her being the green thumbed little old lady that she is plants the finger, before the ambulance attendants take her off to the hospital on her final ride.

Casting call:
Would love to see Angus Scrimm as the Old Man.

The Day the Stars Moved:
The Feel:
There’s really no much to this one. Angst. A brief moment of “what the hell did they put in this cigarette” and it was over. Nothing to see here. Moving on.


The Voice of Strad:
Favorite Character:
Old Man Strad.

The Feel:
Beautiful story.



Last Page Sound:
There were a few clinkers in the mix, but there was some awesomeness too.

Author Assessment:
All in all a good set of stories.

Editorial Assessment:
Would have liked to see the author pushed to make the stories a bit longer.

Knee Jerk Reaction:
really good book

Disposition of Book:
e-Book

Would recommend to:
genre fans
Profile Image for Christina McMullen.
Author 23 books286 followers
September 23, 2014
The Dimension Scales and Other Stories is a fun and fascinating read. Like other reviewers, I felt the tone had a classic sci-fi feel.The comparison to The Twilight Zone is rather apt. While reading, I could definitely envision some of these tales playing out in black and white with "futuristic" styles straight out of the sixties.
Some seem to be cautionary tales, many have a political slant, and some hover on the border of horror. Scalp probably unnerved me most, followed by The Drawing Room. Alex, Boudicca, and Benny the Bear might have been my favorite, mostly because I have a soft spot for machine sentience. I did find that some of the stories left me with unanswered questions, but in keeping with the classic tone, this did not detract from the enjoyable reading experience.

My only complaint, if you can call it such, is that the author tells you upfront that all but one of the stories are interconnected. Some are obvious, some are not, but going into the book with this in mind can be distracting from the story itself. I would move this nugget of info to the back of the book and give the readers a reason to reread. A bonus puzzle of sorts, like Easter eggs in a movie or video game.
Profile Image for Megan.
18 reviews17 followers
September 9, 2014
I thoroughly loved "The Dimension Scales & Other Stories" by Garry Abbott & easily give it 5 stars. The stories held my attention & flowed smoothly. The writer has a wonderful way of expressing his thoughts. I loved how from the very beginning of each story, you were hooked by the first paragraph..there was something that got your attention that wasn't fully explained until later in the story. I love this kind of writing! It provides a little mystery into the pot. There were no endless useless descriptions..every word helped the story along & had a purpose. The topics were unique..not the same 'ole, same 'ole stories that have been told a 1,000 times. And every one of them has a surprise ending that you just don't see coming! Since it's less than 200 pages & the writing flow so smoothly, you may not be able to put it down until you've devoured the whole thing in one sitting!
Profile Image for Grigory Lukin.
Author 18 books7 followers
May 22, 2014
Garry Abbott's "Dimension Scales and Other Stories" is a quirky collection of short sci-fi stories. Perhaps I'm too used to "hard" science fiction with aliens, robots and lasers, or maybe science fiction in the UK is really that much different from its American counterpart, but I found most stories to be an unusual diversion from usual tropes. A lot of them feature regular people in regular situations with some science fiction thrown in for flavor. The only two issues I have with the anthology are the author's occasional political biases (all rich people are bad; large news organizations are evil) and the fact that some stories don't work well on their own. Most stories in the collection are tied together and work best if you read them all. (For example, the time traveler's story is split into two.) That could be a bit confusing if you like to take time with your stories and read them one at a time. Overall, however, this is a creative compilation that deserves a solid 4-star rating.

Brief reviews of the stories:
"The Diary of Derek Froggat, The Accidental Time-Traveller" - a pretty good take on what would happen if a typical person from the 21st century ended up in 1670
"Black Swarm" - in Soviet Russia (and/or England), the ants exterminate you!
"Love in the Shell" - what would it be like to fall in love with a sketchy artificial intelligence?
"Cry Again Army" - what do you give to somebody who already has everything? The future, of course! A story about the mega-rich and their plan to time-travel through cryogenics
"The Drawing Room" - a very short story about a medical check-up gone horribly wrong.
"The Dimension Scales" - a misunderstood mad genius tries to get some attention.
"Alex, Boudicca and Benny the Bear" - probably my favorite story. The scene in the Museum of War, where a hologram of Alexander the Great chats with a cybernetic teddy bear, was pure gold.
"Animals Attack: Parts I to IV" - when all the animals turn on all the humans, a few survivors barricade a stadium and create their own society.
"The Next Level" - more of a thriller than a sci-fi story, about the nature of power and the morality of politicians.
"Newsbot Serial One" - what happens if you overthrow the news media and try to make the news perfectly objective by outsourcing it to robots?
"The Beep Next Door" - have you ever been bothered by incessant beeping coming from your neighbor's apartment? You may not want to investigate it after reading this story.
"Scalp" - a highly unorthodox approach to growing pineapples in England. (For science!)
"The Day the Stars Moved" - I'm not sure this qualifies as science fiction per se... A story about an ordinary girl with an ordinary life who glimpses something extraordinary.
"The Voice of Strad" - the accidental time traveler time-travels again and pays Antonio Stradivari a visit.
Profile Image for Joseph.
121 reviews5 followers
August 25, 2014
A thoroughly weird and at times chilling collection of 14 tales teetering between Science Fiction and pure whimsy. It has been compared to the Twilight Zone, and that is as apt a comparison as I myself can make, because that is the first idea that came to mind after getting through the first three stories. Themes explored include Artificial Intelligence that runs amok, giant queen ants with British accents that reclaim the earth from the spreading human pestilence, and accidental time travelers who should have stayed home. My favorite story, Cry Again Army, may be the most polished of the lot, and quite a visionary piece of writing- a transhumanist nightmare of cryogenically preserved elites who awaken to a world that is unlivable a couple of centuries later, thanks no doubt to their own shortsightedness.

Almost every story is a stunner, with endings that come out of left field, totally unexpected, and that's what a reader looks for in a collection such as this. As far as debuts go, Garry Abbott has delivered an entertaining, and off-the-wall anthology of weirdness that I thoroughly enjoyed. I eagerly await his next offering with anticipation.
Read full review @ http://wp.me/p4pAFB-jE
Profile Image for Wayne McCoy.
4,298 reviews32 followers
August 10, 2014
'The Dimension Scales and Other Stories' is a collection of short stories by Garry Abbott. The stories reminded me of The Twilight Zone and some of the short stories of Philip K. Dick. That means I liked them quite a bit.

There is an accidental time traveller, a woman whose family intervenes between her and her unconventional lover, a creepy garden patch and a man trapped in a strange experiment with only a pencil and an Etch A Sketch. My favorite story might be Cry Again Army about cryogenics and a woman trapped in a marriage she no longer wants to be in. But it's hard to pick a favorite.

There is some interlinking between stories, and that's fun to discover. The stories were all pretty good and I look forward to reading more by this author.

I was given a review copy of this ebook by Garry Abbott and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Thank you for allowing me to review this engaging short story collection.
Profile Image for Catherine.
18 reviews
August 22, 2014
Reading this book, I really had the feeling of "watching" 14 episodes of the Twilight Zone! Garry Abbott made me laugh, think, wonder. The preface was a bonus, especially regarding the topics: "...Metamorphosis and survival feature heavily. Exacerbation and social experimentation play a part, too. Identity is not far behind."
Actually, I read the book twice. The first time enjoying each story individually, the second time looking for the links Garry Abbott mentions in the preface. They are not always easy to find...
"Black Swarm", "The Dimension Scales" and "Scalp" made me really laugh (I'm not sure if other readers will see it the same way...) and I found "Love in the Shell" and "Newsbot Serial One" not too far from reality...
I recommend this book to all fans of pure "vintage" Science Fiction. It's a great first collection and I'm looking forward to reading more from this author!

I received this ebook free through LibraryThing Member Giveaways in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for J.A. Ironside.
Author 59 books355 followers
September 20, 2014
This is a pretty weird but also enjoyable collection of sci-fi stories. They are all interlinked and do work better if you read them together - a bit like walking through a series of interconnected boxes with a different tableau in each one, framed at either end by the time traveler's story.

My favorites were Love in the Shell, The Cry Again Army and The Next Level. Characterization is generally good though I can't say I really liked anyone in particular. The editing is fairly good also and this is a diverting collection.

My one niggle is that a lot of the stories seem to just stop rather than end. This may be deliberate in keeping with classic 50s style sci-fi. But it irritated me: I don't need all threads tied up but I do like an ending rather than to be cut off. Personal preference though.

Definitely one for sci-fi and weird fiction fans although don't expect any space opera!
Profile Image for NVTony.
462 reviews2 followers
August 10, 2016
Was intrigued by story line when read description. Big science fiction fan. Book more than met my expectations for genre. Made me think about what reading and found myself re-reading passages that caught my imagination. Look into the future you may be surprised what lurks just ahead.
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