First Publication: 1968
Cover Artist: Paul Lehr
Challenges:
Deal Me In Short Story Challenge
42 Challenge 2015
The 2015 Sci-Fi Experience
Vintage Sci-Fi Challenge
First Line: "So it was there, eight months later, that Rudy found her; in that huge and ugly house off Western Avenue n Los Angeles; living with them, all of them; not just Jonah, but all of them."
"Shattered Like a Glass Goblin", on the surface, is about a man named Rudy who gets out of the army on a medical discharge. He goes in search of the woman he is to marry. Meanwhile, Kris has moved to a house filled with drugged out people. Kris will not leave so Rudy joins the group. The rest of the story graphically describes Rudy's descent. Are the people strung out on drugs...or are they something else?
Featuring reviews of science fiction & fantasy novels, short fiction, anthologies, graphic novels, with occasional television & movie reviews and general commentaries.
Showing posts with label 1968. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1968. Show all posts
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Friday, January 18, 2013
Dragonflight by Anne McCaffrey
Title: Dragonflight
Author: Anne McCaffrey
First Publication: 1968
Cover Artist: Michael Whelan
Series: The Dragonriders of Pern
"Dragonflight" has been sitting on my to be read shelf since the first time I spotted the Michael Whelan cover back in 1979. I loved the cover but never got around to reading the book until Carl (of Stainless Steel Droppings) picked it for a group read. I missed getting my comments posted the first week so here are both week one and week two.
Author: Anne McCaffrey
First Publication: 1968
Cover Artist: Michael Whelan
Series: The Dragonriders of Pern
"Dragonflight" has been sitting on my to be read shelf since the first time I spotted the Michael Whelan cover back in 1979. I loved the cover but never got around to reading the book until Carl (of Stainless Steel Droppings) picked it for a group read. I missed getting my comments posted the first week so here are both week one and week two.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Short Story Sunday - Jan. 16, 2011
1. "Dismal Light" by Roger Zelazny
First Printing: Worlds of IF, May 1968
When I was researching bibliographies for my Roger Zelazny Reading Project, I somehow missed this one. A later search listed this story as the first episode in his “Francis Sandow” series. The series consists of four stories.
1. Dismal Light (1968) – short fiction
2. Isle of the Dead (1969) – novel
3. To Die in Italbar (1973) – novel
4. Sandow’s Shadow (2009) – outline
I wonder if anyone will take the outline and develop it into a story?
Francis Sandow is in the background for most of this story. As is typical in much of his fiction, Zelazny mixes science fiction and mythological/magical elements. He takes to heart the Arthur C. Clarke statement that sufficiently advanced science will appear as magic. I like his work because of the way he manages to keep the mystery in his tales of the future. Instead of straight science fiction, I consider much of his work to fall into the science fantasy category. This one contains a person with the power to remold worlds. Is this hard science? No. But this is the background for the story. It is not the main plot. The story is focused on the people and the effects this world creation has on others. The author’s strengths have always been in creating mythological type situations, exploring fantastic worlds, and the characters he has created. The other author who explores lonely characters, similar to Zelazny, is George R. R. Martin. Martin and Zelazny are very similar in their short fiction writing.
Sandow has created a new world that is being used as a prison. When something appears that is not supposed to be there, humanity has to evacuate the planet. Our protagonist is someone who served their sentence, decided to stay on the planet, and now refuses to leave when the rest of the personnel are taken. He is staying to the end to finish an experiment he is working on. Of course, it turns out that this is not the real reason.
Zelazny does an excellent job of exploring the relationships between the various characters. I do not want to give away any of the surprises so I will not go into a detailed discussion of what the relationships are. Trust me that the author does his usual great job with the story.
Condensing it down to a bullet point list would show the following items.
• A habitable planet created from an inhabitable world
• A person with god-like powers
• The end of a world
• An unexplainable mystery
• The psychology of prisoners
• The politics of blame when things go wrong.
• What a person is willing to risk to meet the person they most need to talk
to.
“Dismal Light” definitely has me interested in reading the rest of the “Francis
Sandow” series.
2. "The Naked Matador" by Roger Zelazny
First Printing: Amazing Stories, July 1981
The author explores his non-science fiction influence in this story. If you
changed the final revelation, this story would seem at home along side of the stories of Raymond Chandler. At first, I thought it was a mystery noir tale. The characters are straight from the standard pulp pages of stories like the Hard Case Crime books being published today. A woman helps out a down on his luck drifter who is being pursued by criminals. People die. The mystery is how they are dying. This would make a perfect Twilight Zone episode.
Highly recommended if you enjoy Zelazny’s use of mythology. If you want to read only Zelazny’s science fiction stories, skip this one. “The Naked Matador” is a nice blend of crime noir and mythology.
Labels:
1968,
1981,
Amazing Stories,
Worlds of IF,
Zelazny (Roger)
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