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50 Short Science Fiction Tales

Robert A. Heinlein, Fritz Leiber, John D. MacDonald, C. M. Kornbluth, Theodore Sturgeon, A. E. Van Vogt, Robert Sheckley, Jack Finney

50 Short Science Fiction Tales Robert A. Heinlein, Fritz Leiber, John D. MacDonald, C. M. Kornbluth, Theodore Sturgeon, A. E. Van Vogt, Robert Sheckley, Jack Finney List Price: $5.95
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 16 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

titles 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

Includes 2 poems at ends so 52 titles.
Ballade of an Artificial Satellite - Poul Anderson
The Fun They Had - Isaac Asimov
Men are Different - Alan Bloch
The Ambassadors - Anthony Boucher
The Weapon - Frederic Brown
Random Sample - T.P. Caravan
Oscar - Cleve Cartmill
The Mist - Peter Cartur
Teething Ring - James Causey
The Haunted Space Suit - Arthur C Clarke
Stair Trick - Mildred Clingerman
Unwelcome Tenant - Roger Dee
The Mathematicians - Arthur Feldman
The Third Level - Jack Finney
Beautiful, Beautiful, Beautiful! - Stuart Friedman
The Figure - Edward Grendon
The Rag Thing - David Grinnell
The Good Provider - Marion Gross
Columbus Was a Dope - Robert A Heinlein
Texas Week - Albert Hernhuter
Hilda - HB Hickey
The Choice - W Hilton-Young
Not With a Bang - Damon Knight
The Alter at Midnight - CM Cornbluth
A Bad Day for Sales - Frits Leiber
Who's Cribbing? - Jack Lewis
Spectator Sport - John D MacDonald
The Cricket Ball - Avro Monhattan
Double-Take - Winston K Marks
Prolog - John P McKnight
The Available Data on the Worp Reaction - Lion Miller
Narapoia - Alan Nelson
Tiger by the Tail - Alan E Nourse
Counter Charm - Peter Phillips
The Fly - Arthur Porges
The Business, As Usual - Mack Reynolds
Two Weeks in August - Frank M Robinson
See? - Edward G Robles, Jr.
Appointment at Noon - Eric Frank Russell
We Don't Want Any Trouble - James H Schmitz
Built Down Logically - Howard Schoenfeld
An Egg a Month from All Over - Idris Seabright
The Perfect Woman - Robert Sheckley
The Hunters - Walt Sheldon
The Martian and the Magician - Evelyn E Smith
Barney - Will Stanton
Talent - Theodore Sturgeon
Project Hush - William Tenn
The Great Judge - AE Van Vogt
Emergency Landing - Ralph Williams
Obviously Suicide - S Fowler Wright
Six Haiku - Karen Anderson

The Masque Of Manana

Robert Sheckley

The Masque Of Manana Robert Sheckley Amazon Price: $29.00
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Sheckley at his best 5 out of 5 stars.
6 of 8 people found this review helpful.

I think Robert Sheckley is one of the most underrated writers in US. The rest of the world loves his books, while in US most of his publications are out of print. Check this book out. while the stories are fun, they also make you think about lots of things in very unusual ways.

If I could I would give him ten stars out of five.

Over forty works of short fiction 5 out of 5 stars.
4 of 6 people found this review helpful.

Over forty works of short fiction by Robert Sheckley pack a presentation spiced with the science fiction artwork of Bob Eggleton, making MASQUE OF MANANA a 'must have' for any Sheckley fan and many a newcomer. From 'Squirrel Cage' to 'Seventh Victim', this gathers many writings from the 1950s through later years and represents a notable retrospective any serious science fiction holding must have.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

An SF collection that oozes with wit and whimsy 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

This is a wonderful collection of short stories by one of science fiction's cleverest storytellers. Most are very short indeed - about 10-12 pages - and they range widely in subject matter and setting. Some (the AAA Ace stories) are very funny, while others are more in the nature of cautionary tales: "Something for Nothing" seems all too topical, given the effects we are now experiencing from too-easy credit. If I had to choose one word to describe most of these stories, that word would be "whimsical" -- although a minority are sober, even somber, in tone.

Adding to the enjoyment of these stories is Sheckley's skill as a writer. Time and again, I found myself savoring a clever turn of phrase. Few other writers that I can think of have Sheckley's talent with the English language. If you enjoy clever, thought-provoking speculative fiction, this collection of short stories will delight you!

Editorial Review:

This volume contains the major short science fiction of Robert Sheckley.

Tales of the Shadowmen 1: The Modern Babylon

Tales of the Shadowmen 1: The Modern Babylon Amazon Price: $22.95
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

A lot of fun! 5 out of 5 stars.
8 of 8 people found this review helpful.

Most of us know a few of the great characters of French popular literature. Captain Nemo, the Count of Monte Cristo, and the Phantom of the Opera have made it onto the world stage and are well known in many languages. In his time the gentleman thief Arsene Lupin was nearly as popular as Sherlock Holmes, though few Americans know him today except as the grandfather of the anime character Lupin III. Alas, most of these characters are unknown to most non-French readers.

Jean-Marc Lofficier began to open up this world with SHADOWMEN, a non-fiction guide to the heroes and villains of French popular literature. Now, TALES OF THE SHADOWMEN: THE MODERN BABYLON follows this up with a wonderful collection of stories which brings these characters and some of their British, American, and other contemporaries together in a set of new stories.

"Cadavres Exquis" by Bill Cunningham is a severe and painful makeover for the obscure French proto-superhero, Fascinax. It made me think a little of DARK NIGHT RETURNS, but it is even more intense in the way that it re-imagines the character.

"When Lemmy Met Jules" by Terrance Dicks pairs the author's character, Lemmy Caution, with the famous French detective Maigret. This one is short, funny, and perfectly in character. It's a real gem.

"The Vanishing Devil" by Win Scott Eckert is an encounter every pulp fan has wanted to see. Win uses the obscure French character Francis Ardan and his archenemy Natas in a conflict that comes across as Doc Savage vs. Fu Manchu. He does great job of capturing the personalities of both main characters.

"The Three Jewish Horsemen" by Vivian Etrivert is another short but very clever story bringing together a wonderful assortment of characters, including Lupin and the Phantom of the Opera. The last line is a special treat.

"The Werewolf of Rutherford Grange" by Greg Gick is part 1 of a longer story to be concluded in Vol 2. This is an atmospheric occult-themed mystery teaming French investigatory Harry Dickson and the Sar Dubnotal. The story manages to be introspective while losing none of its fast paced excitement. I really enjoyed this and am eager to read the conclusion.

"The Last Vendetta" by Rick Lai puts together a rogues gallery of characters at an "assassins' auction." Arsene Lupin's greatest enemy, Josephine Balsamo mingles with a variety of characters from spaghetti westerns. The story is intricately plotted and packed with details that I'm still catching after several readings. Rick has a wonderfully sly sense of humor that comes through when you start peeling back the layers.

"The Sainte-Genevieve Caper" by Alain Le Bussy is short and funny. A great use of classic characters making their presence felt without actually appearing.

"Journey to the Center of Chaos" by Jean-Marc and Randy Lofficier is a great use of period and setting as Robur (from Jules Verne's MASTER OF THE WORLD) recruits a group of literary characters from a threat involving the yeti and their Tibetan stronghold. I liked the combination of characters and thought the use of Dahoor was especially good.

"Lacunal Visions" by Samuel T. Payne is a story of Poe's detective August Dupin in an unearthly mystery featuring Doctor Omega. This is a very enjoyable story and showcases Dupin's ingenuity beautifully.

"The Kind Hearted Torturer" by John Peel was one of my favorites in the collection. The combination of characters (Dupin and the Count of Monte Cristo) was inspired, and Peel captured them very well.

"Penumbra" is another unexpected and wonderful combination of characters. This was conceptually brilliant as Chris Roberson brings the French character Judex into connection with several much better known cloaked avengers of the night.

"The Paris Ganymede Clock" by Robert Sheckley is one of the late writer's final (possibly the final) story. It involves Lord Peter Wimsey and the French villain Fantomas in a futuristic mystery. I feel bad that I really didn't follow this story well. I came away confused.

"The Titan Unwrecked; or, Futility Revisited" by Brian Stableford pictures a transatlantic crossing on a luxury liner with famous characters (including a number of the great vampires of literature.) This was more pessimistic in tone than I usually like, but wildly inventive and compellingly written. I am always dazzled by Mr. Stableford's scope of knowledge and his ability to weave so much together in his stories.

All in all, this is a collection that succeeds by turns in being adventurous, eerie, chilling, and funny. It is tremendously imaginative and is more sheer fun than any collection I've read in quite awhile.

Dimensions of Sheckley : The Selected Novels of Robert Sheckley

Robert Sheckley

Dimensions of Sheckley : The Selected Novels of Robert Sheckley Robert Sheckley Amazon Price: $29.00
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

A compilation of selected novels by a master science fiction 5 out of 5 stars.
24 of 24 people found this review helpful.

Dimensions Of Sheckley is a compilation of selected novels by master science fiction author Robert Sheckley, and include several of his works which had fallen out of print. All these terrific stories are collected under one cover and newly accessible for the discriminating science fiction connoisseur. The novel and novella titles comprising Dimensions Of Sheckley include "Immortality, Inc.", "Journey Beyond Tomorrow", "Mindswap", "Dimension of Miracles", and "Minotaur Maze". An informative introduction by Mike Resnick and an informed afterword by Tom Gerencer round out this mind-bending collection of future worlds ever-so-slightly askew from the evil realities of the present. A classic compilation by one of the most gifted science fiction authors of the 20th Century, Dimensions Of Sheckley is a "must-read" for every dedicated science fiction enthusiast!

Editorial Review:

A collection of five novels: Immortality, Inc.; Minotaur Maze, Journey Beyond Tomorrow, Mindswap, and Dimension of Miracles.

Mindswap

Robert Sheckley

Mindswap Robert Sheckley Amazon Price: $14.35
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 7 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Pointed the way to Hitchhiker's Guide 5 out of 5 stars.
7 of 8 people found this review helpful.

Way back when -- er, okay, when I was in high school, which was more than two decades ago -- a friend's father used to say, "The world is divided into two kinds of people: those who have read Mindswap, and those who have not." He happened to be a minister in a protestant church, which is interesting to me, but doesn't really matter (I'm agnostic).

Funny that years later, Mindswap is one of the books I keep looking back to. I read it again, or -- more often -- read parts of it again. I remember thinking when I read it that it was the closest LITERARY thing to the Marx brothers I'd ever seen -- but that analogy is flawed, and if you really expect Groucho, Chico, and Harpo you may be disappointed.

But as an antic, irreverant, inanely comic sci-fi read, what a gem! It doesn't surprise me that Douglas Adams referenced Scheckley as one of his inspirations. Adams is more overtly Monty Python, but Sheckley has his own groundbreaking social satire. And... Mindswap is joyous!

Editorial Review:

In the future, interstellar travel to alien worlds will be too expensive for most ordinary people. It certainly is for Marvin, a college student who wants to take a really good vacation. And so he signs up for what he can afford, a mindswap, in which your consciousness is swapped into the body of an alien lifeform. But Marvin is unlucky, and finds himself in the body of an interstellar criminal, a body that he has to vacate fast. But that criminal consciousness has stolen Marvin’s earthly body, and Marvin has to find a body on the black market.
Travel from world to world with Marvin, each one crazier than the last, as he keeps finding far from ideal bodies in awful situations, just to stay alive.

ALIENS: Alien Harvest

Robert Sheckley

ALIENS: Alien Harvest Robert Sheckley Amazon Price: $6.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 18 Average rating: 2.5 of 5

for this book "0" stars should be an option 1 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

god awful sums it up as quickly as possible. There is little continuity in the story line, leaving me to believe if mr Sheckley ever bothered to read his finished product. This book pasy absolutely no attention to things discovered about the aliens earlier in the series. What was impossible in all 4 of the previous books, i.e. storming into the alien "superhive", was done with relative ease by three amature's when it killed nearly an entire elite team of colonial marines in "genocide". When i read this book i wanted to tear it apart it was so frustrating, after seeing that this book was published by bantam, i am now seriously considering glueing some pieces or trash together, slapping some postage on it, and adding my name to the list of ALIENS series authors. I only hope the rest aren't this awful, but after reading the first 4 and this being the 5th, i am going to take a break from the series, due to the absolute horridity of this book. DISGUSTING DISPLAY.

Editorial Review:

This time the humans are taking the offensive! Stan Myakovsky is a once-famous scientist fallen on hard times. Now he dodges spaceship repo men and dreams of the marketability of his cybernetic ant. Then a woman named Julie Lish walks into his life. She is beautiful, mysterious, and totally amoral. She is also skilled in the arts of thievery and Oriental self-defense. What's more, she has a plan so outrageous there might be one chance in a million to pull it off.

Together Stan and Julie become the most unlikely pair of pirates in the universe. With a hijacked spaceship and a crew of hardcase misfits, they're searching for the ultimate pot of gold at the end of a bloody intergalactic rainbow: royal jelly from an alien hive. The only problem is that the fortune lies on the universe's most godforsaken planet. And once they get their hands on it, the'll have to fight their way past the aliens to get off the planet alive.

The 10th Victim

Robert Sheckley

The 10th Victim Robert Sheckley List Price: $2.95
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Money versus love and death, not without future lifestyles 4 out of 5 stars.
6 of 6 people found this review helpful.

To control violent tendencies in the future the state offers a game bases on those desires. If you chose to sign up, and possibly win a massive dollar award for abilities, you are assigned to kill, and agree to allow an unknown to try for your life as well. Should you succeed in killing your assignment, without dying first, you become a one. Continueing on, a two , a three, and so forth. If you make it to ten, you win all the prise money your little heart desires. The catch, if you accidently kill a civilian, not signed up for the game, it means your life. The main character of the book, Frelaine, is a nine. He has just spotted the person he needs to rid of in order to become a ten, but oops, he falls in love. So too does she. So do these two kill each other. They believe so until the real deal behind the game becomes known. To clean the world of the types of people that would play this game in the first place. OOT-O. My opinion.... fast paces, heart tuggin, adrenalin pumpin beats. The computer wizadry used in the future isn't too far from reality. The imaginable special effects are mind blowing. Its killing all right, but not a book of blood and guts, a book of out smarts, guarenteed to make anyone think, and then, think again. For any one like myself who finds passion in pure thoughts of the witt. If anything, one should read it simply to confirm their own talents, or not, of staying one step ahead of being on the ball.... a ball is hard to stand on, but amusing to kick. (computer nerds and art freaks find their competition. So do you brain-iacks........ I dare each of you to sign up for the game)

A Farce to Be Reckoned With

Roger Zelazny, Robert Sheckley

A Farce to Be Reckoned With Roger Zelazny, Robert Sheckley Amazon Price: $17.10
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

An awful piece of work. 1 out of 5 stars.
12 of 13 people found this review helpful.

I just finished 'A Farce to Be Reckoned With' by Roger Zelazny and Robert Sheckley. I've read a fair bit of Zelazny--the Amber novels and Lord Of Light and some others. This book looked more light hearted, but I figured I'd give it a try.

I was sorely disappointed. There's no plot. Or, rather, there is a plot, but it makes no sense. Plot turns are introduced (like the Greek gods getting free) and then dropped, willy nilly. There's a character called Peter Westfall who gets Pandora's Box at the beginning, but we never hear from him again. And at the end, we have a fight scene that is a total deus ex machina--the end of the book comes with no explanations.

Normally, you expect characters to have reasons for things they do. They can do weird things, but they should justify it to themselves, and have the actions be a natural outgrowth of their past. This is called characterization. Characters in this book have one sentence justifications for absurd actions. We have a nun who decides to deal with the devil, and an angel who is ordered to spy. There's a set of religious pilgrims headed toward Venice during the Middle Ages. A demon joins them, proves himself to be a demon, and they don't even run away from him.

The dialog is wretched. Everyone converses in a stilted manner. The description is campy; the authors apparently decided to focus on the clothing of women--there are attractive wimples and red low cut blouses galore.

It feels like this book has been subjected to random editing. Or perhaps worse than random, as I feel that there may have been malicious intent at confusing the reader. Characters pop up, disappear for a while, then pop up again with no explanation (an example is the young lady named Priscilla [or Puss]).

But you know what? All of the above flaws could have been forgiven if there had been any scene, any scene at all, that was funny. I wanted to forgive the flaws--I wanted to laugh--I read the entire book, didn't I? But I didn't even crack a smile the entire book. There were times I put it down and thought to myself, 'Why are you wasting your time?' I will admit, I finished the book (I think for the same reasons that folks slow down to look at a wreck on the highway).

Don't buy this book. If you want some funny fantasy, read 'A Night in the Lonesome October' (which is great!) or anything by Blaylock. Don't buy this book.

Editorial Review:

On a devilish sabbatical in Europe, Azzie discovers that morality plays are all the rage. He decides to strike back by producing an "immorality play", in which seven nondescript human pilgrims will be allowed by magic to attain their hearts' desires. But the forces of Good are determined to close the play before it opens. New characters suddenly start roaming the stage, such as a Grateful Dead-listening Cyclops, and Azzie's own protagonists begin changing their hearts' desires on the slightest whim. This is one theatrical production that could do without an angel - and there's even worse news waiting in the wings...

If at Faust You Don't Succeed

Roger Zelazny, Robert Sheckley

If at Faust You Don't Succeed Roger Zelazny, Robert Sheckley List Price: $5.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

an entirely unworthy sequel 2 out of 5 stars.
3 of 6 people found this review helpful.

Unlike its predecessor, "If at Faust" is not funny, the characters are entirely unformed--even the ones we met in the prequel--and there are many agitating inconsistencies in the plot. This is supposedly about a contest between good and evil which takes place at the close of every milennium. It was pretty clear when the first book took place, but this one is less certain. Are we in the year 2000? There's no indication. If we are, why do the contestents concern themselves so much with the medieval and renaissance cultures? Demons in the contemporary world might have been fun. And if this is not the year 2000, why in the world is there a contest? Several stages and characters are set up and introducted and then are just left alone, never developing into anything important or interesting. Basically, nothing happens, and it's just not funny. It's missing the absurd adorability and enchanting ingenuity (and humor) of the first book, "Bring Me the Hea! d of Prince Charming." All I can say in it's favor is that it's a very quick read.

Editorial Review:

The last Millennial contest--between the forces  of Good and Evil for control of the  universe--didn't work out quite so well for Evil and its rooters.  But it's time for the next round, and this time  the demon Mephistopheles is carrying the ball for  the forces of Darkness. But all is not as it seems.  The harried archdemon mistakenly signs up a  medieval cutpurse names Mack the Club, thinking him the  learned Dr. Faust. The demon Azzie, still  stinging from the Evil's last defeat (and not being  chosen to head the current effort), takes events into  his own claws. And the pious angel Michael--well,  let's just say some of his tactics in the titanic  struggle to come are not quite cricket . . . .

Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1952; Part 1 of Simak's *Ring Around the Sun* (Volume 5, No. 3)

Clifford D. Simak, Isaac Asimov, Howard L. Myers, Robert Sheckley

Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1952; Part 1 of Simak's *Ring Around the Sun* (Volume 5, No. 3) Clifford D. Simak, Isaac Asimov, Howard L. Myers, Robert Sheckley By: Galaxy Publishing Corp.
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