Rice Brandy by Michael Stall; The Cat and the Coin by Keith Wells; The Debris of Recent Lives by Charles Partington; Talent Spotter by Sydney J. Bounds; The Black Hole of Negrav by Colin Kapp; A Little More Than Twelve Minutes by Wolfgang Jeschke; The Enemy Within by Donald Malcolm; The Halted Village by John Rackham; The Green Fuse by Martin I. Ricketts.
I picked this up for a song at a garage sale: I'm always in the market for SF and fantasy, be it good or bad. These writings were new when they came out in 1977 (which means they will be pretty dated now!), but since none of the writers have grown into giants of the field since, these stories were unfamiliar and new to me.
As can be expected with any book of this sort, the stories are a pretty motley collection, from the downright bad to the excellent. So here is the report:
Rice Brandy by Michael Stall - Alternative history: mildly interesting, but nothing to write home about.
The Cat and the Coin by Keith Wells - Fantasy humour: did not work for me at all.
Talent Spotter by Sydney J. Bounds - Soft SF/ Fantasy: again, mildly interesting.
The Debris Of Recent Lives by Charles Partington - SF: I did not understand this one. It's all modernistic and noir.
The Black Hole of Negrav by Colin Kapp - This is an excellent hard SF story, about the "unconventional engineers". Colin Kapp has written a number of stories this group coming up with innovative solutions for unforeseen problems which crop up as mankind pushes their boundaries out into space. Being an engineer myself, I can appreciate!
A Little More Than Twelve Minutes by Wolfgang Jeschke - A moderately interesting time travel story, translated from the original German.
The Enemy Within by Donald Malcolm - Hard SF story about infection by extraterrestrial virus, on the lines of Who Goes There? by Campbell. Interesting premise, well executed.
The Halted Village by John Rackham - SF story with a rather weird premise. Even though the execution left a lot to be desired, enjoyable for its freshness.
The Green Fuse by Martin I. Ricketts - This was the best of the collection (at least for me), about mankind's encounter with a totally alien biology and the frightening impact of human meddling. It is so eerily similar to Speaker for the Dead by Orson Scott Card that I feel it highly likely that he was inspired by it. If you have not read Card's award-winning novel, read it before you read this story!
A very patchy collection this, with style over substance a recurring theme. After a few pieces with enigmatic plots and ambiguous endings, we get to some stories: Storrs had a lover who died on Cin 2347’s only planet when the star went nova. Picking up an alien Ceol who sculpts the fleshy wood Quar into a likeness of his dead lover Iella they must leave the sculpture on a baren planet after the Ceol dies on board - “The Debris Of Recent Lives” by Charles Partington. Then Colin Kapp takes us to “The Black Hole Of Negrav” where an asteroid orbits so close to a tiny primordial black hole that it looks polished, and the Unorthodox Engineers must build an observation/refinery on it! John Rackham (John T. Phillifent) takes us to a small village where the residents think it’s Sunday every day because of a serum developed by a local doctor but a resident telepath picks up on it in “The Halted Village”, and a missionary couple seriously misunderstand how the locals reproduce in the cautionary tale of “The Green Fuse” by Martin I. Ricketts. Reasonable edition after a weak start.