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The Golden Age of Science Fiction

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Concerning Science Fiction· John W. Campbell Jr
Introduction· Groff Conklin
Part One The Atom
Solution Unsatisfactory· Anson MacDonald· Astounding 5/41
The Great War Syndicate· Frank R. Stockton· Once a Week 12/1888; abridged
The Piper’s Son/Baldy· Lewis Padgett· Astounding 2/45
Deadline· Cleve Cartmill· Astounding 3/44
Lobby· Clifford D. Simak· Astounding 4/44
Blowups Happen· Robert Heinlein· Astounding 9/40
Atomic Power· Don A. Stuart· Astounding 12/34
Part Two The Wonders of Earth
Killdozer· Theodore Sturgeon· Astounding 11/44
Davey Jones’ Ambassador· Raymond Z. Gallun· Astounding 12/35
Giant in the Earth· Morrison Colladay· Wonder Stories 4/33
Goldfish Bowl· Anson MacDonald· Astounding 3/42
The Ivy War· David H. Keller· Amazing 5/30
Liquid Life· Ralph Milne Farley· Thrilling Wonder Stories 10/36
Part Three The Superscience of Man
A Tale of the Ragged Mountains· Edgar Allan Poe· Godey’s Lady’s Book 4/1844
The Great Keinplatz Experiment· Arthur Conan Doyle· Belgravia 7/1885
The Remarkable Case of Davidson’s Eyes· H.G. Wells· Pall Mall Budget 3/28/1895
The Tissue-Culture King· Julian Huxley· Yale Review 4/26
The Ultimate Catalyst· John Taine· Thrilling Wonder Stories 6/39
The Terrible Sense· Calvin Peregoy· Astounding 8/38
A Scientist Divides· Donald Wandrei· Astounding 9/34
Part Four Dangerous Inventions
Tricky Tonnage· Malcolm Jameson· Astounding 12/44
The Lanson Screen· Arthur Leo Zagat· Thrilling Wonder Stories 12/36
The Ultimate Metal· Nat Schachner· Astounding 2/35
The Machine Don A. Stuart· Astounding 2/35
Part Five Adventures in Dimension
Short-Circuited Probability· Norman L. Knight· Astounding 9/41
The Search· A.E. van Vogt· Astounding 1/43
The Upper Level Road· Warner van Lorne· Astounding 8/35
The 32nd of May· Paul Ernst· Astounding 4/35
The Monster from Nowhere· Nelson Bond· Fantastic Adventures 7/39; wrongly attributed to Donald Wandrei in 1st ed.
Part Six From Outer Space
First Contact· Murray Leinster· Astounding 5/45
Universe/Hugh Hoyland· Robert Heinlein· Astounding 5/41
Blind Alley· Isaac Asimov· Astounding 3/45
En Route to Pluto/Yahna· Wallace West· Astounding 8/36
The Retreat to Mars/Dr Hargraves· Cecil B. White· Amazing 8/27
The Man Who Saved the Earth· Austin Hall· All-Story Weekly 12/13/19
Spawn of the Stars· Charles W. Diffin· Astounding 2/30
The Flame Midget· Frank Belknap Long Jr· Astounding 12/36
Expedition· Anthony Boucher· Thrilling Wonder Stories 8/43
The Conquest of Gola· Leslie F. Stone· Wonder Stories 4/31
Jackdaw· Ross Rocklynne· Astounding 8/42

785 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1946

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About the author

Isaac Asimov

4,338 books27.7k followers
Works of prolific Russian-American writer Isaac Asimov include popular explanations of scientific principles, The Foundation Trilogy (1951-1953), and other volumes of fiction.

Isaac Asimov, a professor of biochemistry, wrote as a highly successful author, best known for his books.

Asimov, professor, generally considered of all time, edited more than five hundred books and ninety thousand letters and postcards. He published in nine of the ten major categories of the Dewey decimal classification but lacked only an entry in the category of philosophy (100).

People widely considered Asimov, a master of the genre alongside Robert Anson Heinlein and Arthur Charles Clarke as the "big three" during his lifetime. He later tied Galactic Empire and the Robot into the same universe as his most famous series to create a unified "future history" for his stories much like those that Heinlein pioneered and Cordwainer Smith and Poul Anderson previously produced. He penned "Nightfall," voted in 1964 as the best short story of all time; many persons still honor this title. He also produced well mysteries, fantasy, and a great quantity of nonfiction. Asimov used Paul French, the pen name, for the Lucky Starr, series of juvenile novels.

Most books of Asimov in a historical way go as far back to a time with possible question or concept at its simplest stage. He often provides and mentions well nationalities, birth, and death dates for persons and etymologies and pronunciation guides for technical terms. Guide to Science, the tripartite set Understanding Physics, and Chronology of Science and Discovery exemplify these books.

Asimov, a long-time member, reluctantly served as vice president of Mensa international and described some members of that organization as "brain-proud and aggressive about their IQs." He took more pleasure as president of the humanist association. The asteroid 5020 Asimov, the magazine Asimov's Science Fiction, an elementary school in Brooklyn in New York, and two different awards honor his name.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_As...

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Dave.
232 reviews19 followers
January 6, 2009
"The Best of Science Fiction", edited by Groff Conklin, is an anthology of short fiction first published in 1946. The first edition of this book was a large volume which tried to live up to its ambitious title. There were 40 short stories put into 6 sections titled as follows: "The Atom", "The Wonders of Earth", "The Superscience of Man", "Dangerous Inventions", "Adventures in Dimension", and "From Outer Space". The collection includes a large number of stories originally published between 1930 and 1945, from authors like Robert Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, Clifford D. Simak, Theodore Sturgeon, A.E. van Vogt, and many more. In addition, there were some older stories from Edgar Allen Poe, Arthur Conan Doyle, H.G. Wells, among others.
The revised edition, published in 1963 included just 22 of the original 40 stories, losing all of the older stories, and some of the newer ones as well. It is true that some of the stories were somewhat dated, and certainly the revised edition is a very good selection of stories from the 30's and first half of the 40's. However, I prefer the lengthier original edition, which was republished in 1980 under the name "The Golden Age of Science Fiction." There are too many stories to name them all, but among those that are included are "Deadline" by Cleve Cartmill, "Killdozer!" by Theodore Sturgeon, "Goldfish Bowl" by Anson MacDonald (a.k.a. Robert Heinlein), "First Contact" by Murray Leinster (a.k.a. William F. Jenkins), and "Jackdaw" by Ross Rocklynne, all of which appear in both editions of this book.

This book was tied for 13th on the Arkham Survey in 1949 as one of the `Basic SF Titles'. It also was rated as the 6th best book on the 1952 Astounding/Analog All-Time Poll. As for awards for the stories in this collection: "Killdozer!" was tied for 35th on the Astounding/Analog All-Time Poll for Short Fiction in 1971. "First Contact" was tied for 9th on the same poll, and won the Retro Hugo for novelettes written in 1945 which was awarded in 1996. "The Piper's Son" was also nominated for the Retro Hugo for novelettes written in 1945.
Profile Image for Lloyd Dalton.
17 reviews1 follower
November 23, 2011
It was mind-blowing to tour the collective imagination of science fiction writers in 1946.

This was before:
- The atomic bomb
- Space travel
- Computers
- Telecommunications
- Understanding DNA

The book's introduction praises "serious" science fiction, which it contrasts with "comic-book" stories. This is hilarious, because half the stories in the anthology are Zap Brannigan pulp. The book has aliens, more aliens, man-eating plants, man-eating blobs, utopias, dystopias, apocalyptic disasters, romance, bromance, racism, sexism, and batman. I'm talking about a man who has bat tissue transplanted into his ear, and gains the powers (and characteristics) of a bat.

There are also two stories by Heinlein and Asimov which stand apart. It's easy to tell why those guys had actual writing careers.
1,668 reviews5 followers
June 20, 2024
The first Groff Conklin anthology, published in 1946 which includes SF fiction from the 1920s through the 1940s. A great anthology even if some of the stories are dated.
Profile Image for Andrew.
658 reviews162 followers
December 23, 2020
A rather stodgy collection that is best read in spurts, or by skipping certain sections completely. It's laid out in six sections, the first three of which weren't that appealing (and one of THOSE -- The Atom -- which you could probably skip completely due to how dated it is).

The only memorable stories in those first three sections were from the Wonders of the Earth section: "Killdozer!" a surprisingly compelling tale about a possessed bulldozer, and "Davy Jones' Ambassador," an underwater adventure that reminded me a lot of the James Cameron film "The Abyss." The third section, The Superscience of Man, was the most disappointing for me as it had the big names of short fiction -- Poe, Doyle, Wells and Julian Huxley -- but featured telepathy and body-swapping stories that were uniformly dull.

The best stories by far were by two other big names -- Heinlein and Asimov -- and found in the last From Outer Space section. Heinlein's "Universe" was a proto-Matrix type dystopian hero's journey about a huge spaceship whose inhabitants believe there is no outer world. It featured some well-layered philosophical and religious musings about the nature of reality and how people become entrenched in their beliefs. Asimov's "Blind Alley" is a fascinating psychological examination of colonization with a great payoff as only Asimov does.

The other stories worth reading are "Ultimate Metal," about a newly discovered alloy whose inventor doesn't research enough before implementation; "The Machine," about a disastrous world where a supercomputer takes care of all of humanities needs; "The Monster from Nowhere," a cool mystery about an extra-dimensional "monster"; and "The Search," one of the best and most complete time-travel stories I've read.

Still, that's a pretty low ratio of good stories and the entire collection is forgettable except as a nifty glimpse at the origins of the genre. Campbell's preface is pretty interesting as well, in any case significantly moreso than Conklin's.

Not Bad Reviews

@pointblaek
Profile Image for William  Knight.
82 reviews3 followers
November 29, 2014
This anthology had very good stories reflecting the early days of sci-fi. Sadly, I'd read many of them, since I've been a life-long fan of the genre. Many were worth rereading, though, as I'd read them long ago.

Reading books written in the 1930's have archaic ideas regarding women and race. That can be a bit jarring to us 21st century readers. Smoking was taken for granted, as was cocktail hour. this took me back to my youth in the '50's and '60's when these practices were common and socially acceptable.

The authors chosen were all early favorites, so I found the stories good examples of science fiction's growth over time. This is a long book; over 5000 pages, but well worth the time spent.
Profile Image for Libby Beyreis.
271 reviews7 followers
May 28, 2019
There are a couple of good yarns in this book, but mostly it's all very dated, old-fashioned SF written before SF authors had discovered the knack of telling an interesting story. I can only read so many unironic stories about square-jawed, all-American scientist adventurers before it gets tedious. As an exploration of the roots of modern SF, the book has a small amount of anthropological interest, but even for that I wouldn't recommend seeking it out.
583 reviews11 followers
January 28, 2015
This is a collection of classic SF stories written before 1946. Some of these stories are widely reprinted classics, some are obscure. Some are very good, a few are mediocre. This is an excellent overview of short SF up to that time. It likely would not be of interest to those who are not, or not about to become, SF fans.
Profile Image for Christine.
241 reviews1 follower
January 26, 2016
Ten short novels from the hayday of sci-fi including the classic The Weapons Shop by A.E.Van Voight, Killdozer by Sturgeon and others.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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