Tomorrow & tomorrow. Can man really change the future by tampering with the past? "I'm unborn to you, & therefore unbelievable. You're dead & buried five centuries ago, yet the whole future of the world revolves around we two impossibilities..." Or can he look thru the window of the past & keep his sanity? "Cool. The eye of the meteor was cool in my hand. It throbbed because it was alive. Alive & staring at me. It stared hungrily. That was it. The eye was hungry with a terrible blood lust." I'm Looking for Jeff '52 Fritz Leiber story Sally '53 Isaac Asimov story The Dark Room '53 novelette by Theodore Sturgeon The Eternal Eve '50 novelette by John Wyndham The Eye of Tandyla/Pusadian '51 novelette by L. Sprague de Camp The Hungry Eye '59 novelette by Robert Bloch Tomorrow & Tomorrow '47 Ray Bradbury story You'll Never Go Home Again=Beachhead '51 Clifford D. Simak story
Hmm, will think on its rating and the review. Back tomorrow
So its already tomorrow, wow how did that happen :)
So I still haven't worked out what rating to give this book yet, so thought the best way was to mark each story, so.....
Sally - Isaac Asimov, a great story utilising his positronic brain. 5 stars You'll Never Go Home Again - Clifford Simak, another good story about terraforming 4 stars The Eye of Tandyla - L Sprague de Camp, an interesting Fantasy mini bite 3.5 stars Tomorrow and Tomorrow - Ray Bradbury, a gripping time travel short 4 stars The Hungry Eye - Robert Bloch, hmm, ok 3.5 stars The Dark Room - Theodore Sturgeon, again ok, emotional parasitic alien 3.5 stars The Eternal Eve - John Wyndham, now I like John Wyndham and this starts off with his usual wonderful storytelling, but I felt the ending was little weak, so only 3.5 stars I'm Looking for "Jeff" - Fritz Leiber, an interesting fantasy/horror short about a haunting in a bar 4.5 stars
So there we have it, and its looking like it is 4 stars, which is I suppose about right, just. A few good stories and some ok ones. Worth a read though.
Obviously great to read sci-fi from the 70s to see what ideas are still relevant but there's genuinely great stories in this collection. The first and last short stories were a bit weak but the rest were all solid. Each were interesting in their insight into thoughts and attitudes in the 60s & 70s - goes to show how social values seep through the work even when it's not the intention.