- Molly Zero by Keith Roberts In an England two hundred years hence all children are brought up in single sex creches: the Blocks. Molly Zero, young and intelligent, resilient and loving, is a product of the Blocks and is destined for the Elite.
- If I Forget Thee by James E. Gunn Jeri, a onetime surgeon is caught up in a cycle of vengeance where a machine allows him to experience various pasts where women seek horrible revenge.
- Freitzke's Turn by Jack Vance Miro Hetzel is an Effectuator — think expensive private investigator. He takes on a case involving the disappearance of one of his ex-classmates, Faurence Dacre, from his childhood days at a private academy.
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Robert Silverberg is a highly celebrated American science fiction author and editor known for his prolific output and literary range. Over a career spanning decades, he has won multiple Hugo and Nebula Awards and was named a Grand Master by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America in 2004. Inducted into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame in 1999, Silverberg is recognized for both his immense productivity and his contributions to the genre's evolution. Born in Brooklyn, he began writing in his teens and won his first Hugo Award in 1956 as the best new writer. Throughout the 1950s, he produced vast amounts of fiction, often under pseudonyms, and was known for writing up to a million words a year. When the market declined, he diversified into other genres, including historical nonfiction and erotica. Silverberg’s return to science fiction in the 1960s marked a shift toward deeper psychological and literary themes, contributing significantly to the New Wave movement. Acclaimed works from this period include Downward to the Earth, Dying Inside, Nightwings, and The World Inside. In the 1980s, he launched the Majipoor series with Lord Valentine’s Castle, creating one of the most imaginative planetary settings in science fiction. Though he announced his retirement from writing in the mid-1970s, Silverberg returned with renewed vigor and continued to publish acclaimed fiction into the 1990s. He received further recognition with the Nebula-winning Sailing to Byzantium and the Hugo-winning Gilgamesh in the Outback. Silverberg has also played a significant role as an editor and anthologist, shaping science fiction literature through both his own work and his influence on others. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife, author Karen Haber.
Average rating: 4.3/5 stars. I rounded this up to 5 because of the strength of Keith Roberts’ Molly Zero. One of the most engaging novellas I’ve ever read. Vance was fun but kinda mindless whereas Gunn felt a little too ‘out there’.
Molly Zero by Keith Roberts - 5/5
This was such an engaging and powerful story. My first introduction to Roberts was his alt history book, Pavane, which was a huge let down for me. Molly Zero, on the other hand, was deeply immersive, engaging, thought-provoking, and tense. Each scene had me yearning for more and more to know what happens next. The genius of writing the story in the second-person—to make you experience this world from the intimate perspective of Molly Zero, was ingenious. It also shows the power of the novella in this form that can capture, hold, and maintain the reader until the perfect point. This is a spectacular work that alone was worth the price of the book.
If I Forget Thee by James Gunn - 4/5
An interesting read about a surgeon whose life is marred by betrayal throughout human history. There was some interesting themes about forgiveness, loneliness, misogyny, and self-perpetuation of hatred. Very potent stuff but it didn’t grip me. Even the reveal at the end felt obvious, but the entire story was quite cinematic and the parallels between the main character’s growth and evolution were interesting.
Freitzke’s Turn by Jack Vance - 4/5
My first time reading Jack Vance. I don’t know what I was expecting for this novella, especially when Vance has quite the reputation for being an excellent writer. What I got was the science fiction equivalent of Agatha Christie’s Poirot. Eccentric interplanetary hopping fun and easy to read. I think the ending could’ve been more interesting or poignant, but private investigator in space was perfectly serviceable.
If I Forget Thee by James E. Gunn. I am very glad that I've never had to cope with emotions this overwhelming. I have to take it on trust that this is a plausible portrayal, and do so based only on previous experience of the author and editor.
Triax (1977) contains three original novellas written specifically for the volume. I concur with Robert Silverberg’s defense of the novella form in the introduction, “it allows the leisurely development of an idea, the careful and elaborate exploration of the consequences of the fictional situation, while at the same time not requiring the intricate plot-and-counterplot scaffolding [...]
3 novellas from 1977 chosen/commissioned by Silverberg.
**** Molly Zero • Keith Roberts **** If I Forget Thee • James E. Gunn **** Freitzke's Turn • Jack Vance
I am tempted to give this anthology five stars, even though I am not yet inclined to give any of the three individual contributions the five stars, simply because here is more proof Silverberg must have been the best sf anthologist of all time, whether best of the year anthologies, historical or thematic take a look back anthologies, or original first publication anthologies like this one. The three novellas are disparate in style and subject - a dystopia, a what is reality mind-bender, and a mystery-sf hybrid - all clocking in at an equally balanced 60 pages give or take, but united in quality - artistic, imaginative. While it is true there was a lot of sf back in the day that was popular and now deservedly more or less forgotten - any best-of from a few decades ago has a number of what were they thinking moments - it is also true that there were books like this - collections of excellent stories by the sf old guard pro's pros that were never reprinted and still outshine the heavily promoted current crop of sf publications.