Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

World's Best Science Fiction #6

World's Best Science Fiction 1970

Rate this book
"An excellent anthology, packed with fine stuff and including many good stories originally published outside the science fiction magazines." - Fantasy & Scince Fiction.

This acclaim was typical of many fine reviews of last year's compilation of the WORLD'S BEST SCIENCE FICTION, and it is equally applicable to the current volume, in which nearly half of the stories will be new even to regular readers of the American science fiction magazines.

Here are stories of space exploration, strange human societies of tomorrow, adventures in the far future and compelling visions of world apocalypse. These are the finest stories of modern science fiction, a rich treasury of wonder to stay in your memory while the future continues to become the present.

Contents:

A Man Spekith by Richard Wilson
After the Myths Went Home by Robert Silverberg
Death by Ecstasy by Larry Niven
One Sunday in Neptune by Alexei Panshin
For the Sake of Grace by Suzette Haden Elgin
Your Haploid Heart by James Tiptree, Jr.
Therapy 2000 by Keith Roberts
Sixth Sense by Michael G. Coney
A Boy and His Dog by Harlan Ellison
And So Say All of Us by Bruce McAllister
Ship of Shadows by Fritz Lieber
Nine Lives by Ursula K. Le Guin
The Big Flash by Norman Spinrad

Hardcover

First published January 1, 1970

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
16 (24%)
4 stars
27 (40%)
3 stars
20 (30%)
2 stars
3 (4%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Peter Tillman.
4,138 reviews495 followers
April 29, 2022
TOC and story details: http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?5...
2020 reread: For a 50-year-old anthology, this is still impressive. As always, some stories weren't to my taste. Editors Donald A. Wollheim (1914-1990) and Terry Carr (1937-1987) are both long-gone, as are many of the authors. Tempis fugit.
Standouts:
● Nine Lives (1969) • novelette by Ursula K. Le Guin (1929-2018). Le Guin struts her SF writing chops in this classic story: a tenclone on a geologically-unstable mining planet. A mining disaster shows that plain old homo saps still have an edge. Best story in the anthology. Wonderfully well-written. 5 stars! I've reread it many times. Online copy: https://www.baen.com/Chapters/9781625...
● A Boy and His Dog (1969) • novella by Harlan Ellison (1934-2018). Won the 1970 Nebula. Runner-up for the 1970 Hugo for best novella. A classic Ellison dystopia that I've read a number of times over the years. Not reread, but I'm guessing it would come in around 4 stars if I had. The comments here, at https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3... are interesting. Online copy of an old pb: https://www.scribd.com/document/35917... (view full-screen to read).
● Death by Ecstasy • [Gil Hamilton] • (1969) • novella by Larry Niven. The first Gil Hamilton story, and it holds up well. Original title was "The Organleggers," and if you've read much Niven, you've likely seen it. 3.7 stars. Not online legally, sfaict [=so far as I can tell].
● For the Sake of Grace (1969) • novelette by Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015). An Arabian-flavored future world, where the status of women is, well, not high. The 12-year-old daughter of a nobleman applies to take the Poet's exam. If she fails, the penalty is solitary confinement for life. This is not a subtle story, but it worked for me. 3.5 stars. Not online, sfaict.
● The Big Flash (1969) • novelette by Norman Spinrad. A heavy-metal hair band, sponsored by a major aerospace corporation, inadvertently(?) starts nuclear Armageddon. More plausible than it sounds, but still pretty grim. 3+ stars. Not online, sfaict.

I didn't reread the Silverberg or the early Tiptree stories (or any of the others not mentioned here). The Panshin was OK, and Leiber's "Ship of Shadows" is, well, very odd. Though it does have a cool ship's cat!
Profile Image for Craig.
6,785 reviews193 followers
June 11, 2021
The 1970 volume of Carr & Wollheim's annual anthology of their picks of the best short science fiction stories of the prior year was one of the, well, best. The book this year was once again pleasently illustrated by Jack Gaughan and John Schoenherr. 1969 was a great year for the field; even NASA won a Hugo Award presented at World Con for the Best Moon Landing Ever. Among the most memorable stories in the book are For the Sake of Grace by Suzette Haden Elgin, After the Myths Went Home by Robert Silverberg, Your Haploid Heart by James Tiptree, Jr., Ship of Shadows by Fritz Leiber (for the cat lovers), Death By Ecstasy by Larry Niven (a Gil Hamilton mystery novella), and The Big Flash by Norman Spinrad (which proves that rock'n'roll is here to stay). My favorite, of course, is A Boy and His Dog by Harlan Ellison, even though it's no longer regarded as being in good taste (sorry).
Profile Image for Alan.
1,294 reviews165 followers
August 20, 2021
We were calling them The Sixties before we even left the decade behind, as this anthology containing only science fiction stories published in 1969 makes very clear. There are even two whole women in the Table of Contents (three, if you count Tiptree, but nobody knew she was Alice then).

The World's best, though? Only if you are content with a world limited to the United States and England...

Contents adapted with thanks from the Wikipedia entry for this volume.

"A Man Spekith" (Richard Wilson)
The Last Man off Earth, and his unheard, unsuspected mechanical companion, try to hold onto a bygone planet's entire culture. Verbose and morose—an inauspicious beginning to the collection.

"After the Myths Went Home" (Robert Silverberg)
I did not remember this particular Silverberg, out of the hundreds he penned during his most prolific period, but it is a trenchant (if again overly woeful) testament to the powers and purposes of myth.

"Death by Ecstasy" (Larry Niven)
Nowadays, of course, we just use our phones for brain stimulation, but this early entry in Niven's Known Space series concerns a more direct, albeit cruder, method: a wire run straight to the pleasure centers of the brain. Do this to mice, give them control of the stimulation, and they'll pleasure themselves to death. Do it to humans... well, we're a lot stronger and smarter than mice.
Aren't we?
This is also the story that introduces us to Gil the Arm, of the ARM (the Amalgamated Regional Militia, that is; Earth's global police force, in charge of hunting down black-market organleggers):
Gilbert Hamilton. Born of flatlander parents, in April, 2093, in Topeka, Kansas. Born with two arms and no sign of wild talents.
—p.57
This is pretty sophisticated worldbuilding, really—interlocking various science-fictional extrapolations, including an overpopulated Earth; asteroid mining; psychic powers (within limits); strong cultural shifts; organ transplantation and its legal (and illegal) consequences; and the aforementioned electronic brain stimulation, among others. "Death by Ecstasy" also manages to deliver a mystery, involving an unexplained (or too easily-explained, perhaps) death.
It also shows a certain tentative recognition that women might actually be human beings:
"Taffy is a person, not an episode, not a symbol of anything, not just a pleasant night."
—Julie, p.76

As influential as this story has been, it might actually be one of the world's best for the year.

"One Sunday in Neptune" (Alexei Panshin)
If the question is "Science or Man," I think the answer has to be "yes." As the wording implies, though, women do not exist in Panshin's Neptune.
This one's short, and not especially memorable, I'm afraid.

"For the Sake of Grace" (Suzette Haden Elgin)
Elgin was a pioneering author of linguistically-focused SF, and founder of the Science Fiction Poetry Association (per Wikipedia). Her first published short story involves low-bandwidth interstellar communication and a patriarchal, poetry-obsessed society.
"When the females of a household take it upon themselves to upset the natural order of things and to violate the rules of decency, there is very little anyone can do."
—The Kadilh ban-Harihn, p.122

It ends as it had to end, as it should end.

"Your Haploid Heart" (James Tiptree, Jr.)
A very human alien biology is at issue here—just the sort of thing Tiptree was best at, and another story in this anthology that might actually have been among the "world's best."

"Therapy 2000" (Keith Roberts)
As prediction, of course, this story entirely misses the mark—but as a commentary on the relentless intrusion of mass media into our lives... well, I can understand why Travers would go to such lengths to shut out the noise.

"Sixth Sense" (Michael G. Coney)
What if being telepathic—being able to know what others think and feel—changes absolutely nothing about human nature?

"A Boy and His Dog" (Harlan Ellison)
Ellison's raw and brutal masterpiece of post-apocalyptic fiction—if you're not triggered by something about this story, there's not much hope left for you. I had forgotten myself just how brutal this one is. And it ends... well, it ends as it needed to end, man, but that don't mean (doesn't mean, Albert) that I have to like it.

"And So Say All of Us" (Bruce McAllister)
Curing Robert's schizophrenia with a plan that's so crazy, it just might work. I'm pretty sure that science has left this story behind... thank goodness.

"Ship of Shadows" (Fritz Leiber)
Spar works in a bar, in a blur, in a bubble—eyes fuzzed, toothless and oppressed, but at that Spar's luckier than many aboard Windrush. And all is made clear and sharp, in the end.
This one's a classic of surreal SF, and my favorite story in this anthology.

"Nine Lives" (Ursula K. Le Guin)
Maybe the science isn't quite up-to-date anymore, but the fiction sure is, in this powerful tale by the late, great Le Guin about a tenclone and their interaction with two lonely singletons.

"The Big Flash" (Norman Spinrad)
The Four Horsemen were nothing more than a cheap closing act for an L.A. nightclub—at least to start with.
A natural endpoint for the book—and this isn't the first collection I've read for which Spinrad's cynical tale of psychedelic cooptation has served as finale.

*

But so... was this the very best the whole world had to offer, in 1969? Nah, I can't believe that. But World's Best Science Fiction 1970 was pretty good, all in all—yeah, baby, I still dig it.
Profile Image for Nate.
623 reviews
December 10, 2015
all of these stories are from 1969, not 1970. highlights include: larry niven's "death by ecstasy", a cool pulpy detective story that works really well despite the fact that its set amongst asteroid belt miners, probably one of sci-fi's silliest tropes; harlan ellison's "a boy and his dog", an incredibly vulgar (especially when compared with the other material here) post-nuke story, that even by 1960s sf standards is way off the sexism scale; and norman spinrad's "the big flash", about a biker/hippie rock band used to promote and sway public opinion on nuclear weapons with a wild stage show and lyrics that would be right at home on a throbbing gristle performance
Profile Image for Nathan Anderson.
195 reviews39 followers
August 7, 2025
A fairly typical anthology lineup with a sizeable handful.of New Wave icons-- Silverberg, Le Guin, Ellison, Spinrad, Niven, etc. As usual though, there are a couple of highlights:

Your Haploid Heart by James Tiptree jr. :

Really liked this one-- bleak and haunting exploration of bigotry and oppression based on genetic traits.

A Boy and his Dog by Harlan Ellison:

I'm starting to find I'm not a big fan of Ellison as an author-- he's an invaluable figure within this era of sci-fi and he's an incredibly entertaining personality, and this isn't to say he hasn't written anything great (I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream is still amazing, warts and all) but ... Ellison's handling of subjects like sexual assault as a cheap thrill is not something I care for.

Nine Lives by Ursula Le Guin:

Easily my favorite of the lineup, will perhaps do a more in-depth write-up on it at some other point.
Profile Image for Rena Sherwood.
Author 2 books51 followers
December 20, 2025
I was born in 1969, so thought I'd finally read what the sci-fi was like for that year ... okay, I'd read Orbit 5, but that doesn't really count.

Some of the stories in here can be found in other, better anthologies.

And again, the pen and ink illustrations were done by Jack Gaughan. They appear before the story, sometimes acting as mild spoilers.

Selections:

* "Introduction" by Our Co-editors. The editors briefly look back at sci-fi of the Sixties, and wish it bye-bye, while looking forward to the Seventies. Also, some reasoning (of sorts) behind the choice of stories.
* "A Man Spekith" by Richard Wilson. There are so many last man in the world stories that it's a sub-genre in sci-fi. Most of those stories are really bad. This is the best of the lot. Now, granted, that's like saying it's the best punk band in Poughkeepskie, but give it a go. It's a bit long and has some dreadful puns, but you can dance to it.
* "After the Myths Went Home" by Robert Silverberg. I read this years ago, and I still remembered it vividly. Powerful, haunting stuff. One of the best things he ever wrote.
* "Death By Ecstasy" by Larry Niven. This was also published under the title, "The Organleggers." In a future Earth, a cop with psi powers investigates the death of his former co-worker, a space miner called a Belter. Nice pun of the Mars Bar, and a nod to Fritz Lieber's story, "The Wanderer." Although billed as a myrder mystery, the only real mystery in this novella as to why it was assumed everyone would still be smoking like chimneys in the future.
* "One Sunday In Neptune" by Alexi Panshin. Rather short, hard sci-fi story of interpersonal conflicts in a mission to Neptune. Oddly enough, in this story, Pluto is not considered a planet, but a moon.
* "For the Sake of Grace" by Suzette Haden Elgin. A girl rebels against a misogynistic society. You get the gist at page five, yet have ages to go before it's predictable conclusion.
* "Your Haploid Heart" by James Tiptree, Jr./Racoona Sheldon/Alice B. Sheldon. Good luck figuring this crap out.
* "Therapy 2000" by Keith Roberts. Very convoluted story set in the year 2000, with sci-fi tropes of "trivee" and world government. Our Protagonist is plagued by noise. The solution to that problem is annoyingly simple. There is also a bizarre girlfriend. Whether she's real or a dream is never explained. You're best off just skipping this mess.
* "Sixth Sense" by Michael G. Coney. Our Protagonist is just a bit different from all the other mind readers of the future. He runs a small inn. Like many stories written around this time, there's a relationship between a teenager and a man in his 30s.
* "A Boy and His Dog" by Harlan Ellison. This violent post-Apocalyptic story is set in 2024, and thankfully Ellison wasn't a prophet. Lots of people and dogs die here. A movie was made of this in 1975. This is the original short story, which later became a novella, etc. The illustrator showed Blood as a bull terrier, when he was actually a shaggy part German Shephard, and a smidgen of Hungarian Puli.
* "And So Say All of Us" by Bruce McAllister. Something about mentally ill asylum patients with telekinesis part of a government experiment and the Triune God of Christianity ... or something.
* "Ship of Shadows" by Fritz Lieber. Difficult fusion of fantasy and sci-fi. I don't like this, since a dog is senselessly murdered by his owner. There's an annoying talking cat.
* "Nine Lives" by Ursula K. LeGuin. A long story about clones that can be found in many other anthologies. Rightly considered one of her best stories.
* "The Big Flash" by Norman Spinrad. Rock and roll ... and the bomb. This can also be found in other anthologies.
Profile Image for George Kasnic.
730 reviews4 followers
July 20, 2025
A testament to Donald A. Wollheim as an editor. I read his anthologies consistently as a teenager, this one I missed. Full of later legendary lights in sci-fi, the stories are solid througout. Tiptree is particularly brilliant in his story. I am not a Spinrad fan, never have been, and the last story in the anthology was his, I did not warm to it, but in the end felt it not only reflected the mutual assured destruction era it was set in, but also was visionary in presenting the influence of technology on the actions of people and its influence on public opinion. The other stories were all gripping and worthwhile.
Profile Image for Timothy.
905 reviews43 followers
Want to Read
January 31, 2026
13 stories:

(5/13 read)

A Man Spekith (1969) • Richard Wilson
**** After the Myths Went Home (1969) • Robert Silverberg
Death by Ecstasy (1969) • Larry Niven
One Sunday in Neptune (1969) • Alexei Panshin
For the Sake of Grace (1969) • Suzette Haden Elgin
*** Your Haploid Heart (1969) • James Tiptree, Jr.
Therapy 2000 (1969) • Keith Roberts
Sixth Sense (1969) • Michael G. Coney
**** A Boy and His Dog (1969) • Harlan Ellison
And So Say All of Us (1969) • Bruce McAllister
***** Ship of Shadows (1969) • Fritz Leiber
***** Nine Lives (1969) • Ursula K. Le Guin
The Big Flash (1969) • Norman Spinrad
Profile Image for Derek.
7 reviews
August 15, 2019
After the Myths Went Home by Silverberg has an ending that is incredibly haunting to me.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
13.4k reviews486 followers
xx-dnf-skim-reference
August 23, 2021
Not my era. Skimmed, skipped, and the few I did actually read made no impression upon me.
August 2021.
Profile Image for Linda.
136 reviews
May 5, 2023
Skipped one; wish I had skipped another but found an author new to me, Suzette Hadin Elgin
Profile Image for Jim Standridge.
158 reviews
March 9, 2026
Great variety of stories. A good mix by some very good authors. Wollheim does great anthologies. All the Worlds Best series are excellent reads.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews