Ace Books, 1979. This series of anthologies featured great science fiction, science fact articles, and illustrations. Stories in this volume
“Go Starless in the Night” by Roger Zelazny “Silver Shoes for a Princess” by James P. Hogan “Three Aliens” by Kevin O'Donnell, Jr. “Feathered Pigs” by Frank Herbert “The Predators” [Jed Lacey” 2]” by David Drake “What Kind of Love Is This?” by Jack C. Haldeman, II
Jim Baen was Editor-in-Chief and publisher of Baen Books, and renowned in the science fiction field for his taste and ability to select authors with strong storytelling ability and steer them to commercial success. Prior to founding of Baen Books, he was the editor of science fiction magazine Galaxy, science fiction editor of Ace Books, and an editor at Tor Books.
This is the fifth issue of Destinies, a science fiction magazine in mass-market paperback format that Baen established and edited for Ace Books until he left to direct his own eponymous science fiction/fantasy publishing company. The first four or five decades of the sf genre (from the first issue of Gernsback's Amazing Stories until around the time of Ellison's Dangerous Visions original anthology, give or take, more or less) were absolutely dominated by the magazines, first in pulp and then in digest-sized format. Destinies was an innovative concept that attempted to blend the best of both worlds, incorporating the less-ephemeral book format with the charm of original illustrations and columns that promoted a sense of community one found in the magazines. The authors were mostly from Baen's stable that he'd built at Ace (and his earlier stint as editor of Galaxy) and ran a little heavy with his odd mix of pro-science conservative libertarianism, but he published some very good stuff. The non-fiction in this fourth volume came from Spider Robinson, Jerry Pournelle, Poul Anderson, G. Harry Stine, an uncredited piece from the L-5 society, and a very good article from James Gunn connected to his classic novel The Immortals. There is good interior art from Alicia Austin, Stephen E. Fabian, Suso, and E.T. Steadman, and a somewhat off-putting John Bush cover. This first anniversary issue's fiction selection was a little on the weak side; it contained short stories by Roger Zelazny, Jack C. Haldeman II, and Frank Herbert, as well as novelettes from David Drake (my favorite) and Kevin O'Donnell, Jr., and a novella by James P. Hogan.