Science Fiction Aficionados discussion
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You're in a werewolf group?!?!?!? Don't you run out of books after a year or so? By the way - do you know of any werewolf themed books originally written in French?

That is 'City'. A fix up from a series of stories.

No, it's more of a shapeshifting concept, but one of the shapes the protagonist can shift into is wolflike. Along with 'Way Station' it has always been one of my favourites. I've done a review here on Goodreads that will give you a clearer idea.



1938 is actually the first year Superman saw publication. He had been floating around for years. He first appeared in a fanzine that Seigel and Schuster put out. Then they tried to sell him to just about every publisher imaginable. I don't have my comic reference books close at hand but if interested I can dig the dates out I suspect.

Here's the cover of the magazine in which Simak's first published work appeared. (See bottom right of cover.)


All five short stories have recently become available online for free. The second through fifth are at archive.org (search terms are magazine title plus month and year). "The World of the Red Sun" I have in an Asimov story collection (Before the Golden Age 1) but is also online here: https://royallib.com/read/Simak_Cliff...
I don't recommend the stories as being all that entertaining or worthwhile, but they were interesting, especially from a historical perspective for pulp in general and Simak's roots in particular. The first and fifth story I would give four stars; the other three, three stars.
One of the main influences on Simak was H. G. Wells's novels. You can see the influence of The Time Machine very clearly in "The World of the Red Sun." Simak starts from the same premise of a time traveler going too far into the future. What the two travelers find there is very different though.
The fourth story, "Hellhounds of the Cosmos," is clearly derived from The War of the Worlds.
My favorite story is the fifth and final story of the group, which seems the closest to modern. It contains the very common science fiction trope of seeking mineral wealth in the asteroids, a vein still being mined today (for example, Leviathan Wakes). The reason I like it so much is that the story is the only one where character is written in a way that is as important to Simak as the attention given the plot. I take it as a sign of Simak's greatness to come.

I love those old pulp Sf magazine covers !!

This was Simak's first SF story. It was published by Hugo Gernsback in the December 1931 issue of Wonder Stories. Here's a link that talks about the story.
http://darkworldsquarterly.gwthomas.o...
Books mentioned in this topic
Before the Golden Age 1 (other topics)The War of the Worlds (other topics)
The Time Machine (other topics)
Leviathan Wakes (other topics)
The Werewolf Principle (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
A.E. van Vogt (other topics)Jack Vance (other topics)
Clifford D. Simak (other topics)
Clifford D. Simak (other topics)
I think for my Goodreads werewolf group's next read, we're going to make the category "science fiction werewolves". I have my two nominations already! That's going to be a good read indeed--getting to combine two genre loves!