Contents include: The Velvet Glove by Harry Harrison / Road To Nightfall by Robert Silverberg / The Robot Who Wanted To Know by Felix Boyd / The Golden Pyramid by Sam Moscowitz / Title Fight by William Campbell Gault / My Father, The Cat by Henry Slesar / The Amazing Mrs. Mimms by David C. Knight / Mex by Larry M. Harris / Exile From Space by Judith Merril / A Thing of Custom by L. Sprague de Camp / Sit By The Fire by Myrle Benedict / Fall of Knight by A. Bertram Chandler / In Lonely Lands by Harlan Ellison / A Way Of Life by Robert Bloch / The Muted Horn by Dorothy Salisbury Davis / The Bounty Hunter byt Avram Davidson / The Pacifist by Arthur C. Clarke / She Only Goes Out at Nigtht by William Tenn / First Law by Isaac Asimov / The Day Will Come by Vithaldas O'Quinn.
Fantastic Universe was a digest-sized science fiction magazine that was published from 1953-1960. There were 69 issues, and Santesson was the editor from 1956-1960, succeeding Leo Margulies. The popularity faded in his last years as the publisher tried unsuccessfully to capitalize on the flying-saucer fad. Santesson edited this volume, which can be seen as a "Best of..." his term as editor. The magazine wasn't as high-paying or prestigious a market as were other magazines of the time, such as Astounding, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, or Galaxy, but he did succeed in printing some good stories. This one has nice work from Harlan Ellison, Henry Slesar, A. Bertram Chandler, L. Sprague de Camp, Robert Silverberg, and others. Perhaps most notable is a robot story, First Law, by Isaac Asimov.
Tenn's "She Only Goes Out at Night ..." is cute, Bloch's "A Way of Life" is funny and acerbic meta-sf (and I don't think much reprinted elsewhere), Ellison's "In Lonely Lands" holds up, and Harrison's (pseud) "The Robot Who Wanted to Know", though predictable, I think still packs the feels. Silverberg's "Road to Nightfall" I've read a number of times, and it remains a strong, dark early story of his. Rest were between decent and meh.
This was an interesting collection of sci-fi stories by different authors. Some gave their age away, but that was OK. And there were several gems that transcended publication date and really tapped into something deeper.