Figure 0. interior art for "Kid Anderson" |
In the Ekcolir Reality original cover by Leo Morey |
Figure 1. Fantasy Travel; interior art by Leo Morey |
Breuer depicts a senseless war that is caused by a meaningless political slogan. The slogan is repeated with religious devotion by the people of one nation, who rally around their shared fantasy and are ready to die in its defense. Breuer also suggests that scientists can be immune to such nonsense because they actually care what words mean.
cover art by Howard V. Brown |
Breuer was from a Czech background and published articles in Czech-language newspapers. I suspect that Breuer carefully followed events in Europe, particularly the political situation in 1920s Czechoslovakia.
When the Nazi propagandist Goebbels was elected in 1928, Breuer was probably appalled. "Whether it was a matter of simplification, constant repetition of memorable slogans, or concentration of propaganda materials in regular campaigns, the principles of mass advertising could easily be applied to political propaganda." (source)
interior art by Elliott Dold, Jr. |
"A Martian Adventure" begins on the surface of Mars in 1978 and Ley asks his readers to pretend that people can breath the atmosphere of Mars and human colonists on Mars must contend with the remaining dominant natives of Mars: giant centipede-like creatures (see the image to the right). In Ley's fictional Mars, there were other Martian natives who built cities a million years in the past, but they went extinct before humans arrived.
The professor, Dan and Nadya. Hot, but still fully clothed. 😞 Interior art by Elliott Dold, Jr. |
interior art for "At the Perihelion" |
In the Ekcolir Reality cover art by Vincent Di Fate |
11. "The Neutrino Bomb" (1961) by Ralph S. Cooper (PhD in physics). Cooper worked on nuclear propulsion systems for spacecraft at Los Alamos. The "story" is mercifully brief and it is a kind of spoof article that came in the middle of efforts to put controls on the testing of nuclear weapons. The "story" mentions neutrons, and a neutron bomb had been suggested in 1958.
cover art by Karl Stephan |
Oliver's Future. "The Mother of Necessity" deals with an imaginary society of the future. It begins in 2062, when it has become common for communities to select their own social systems. There are designers like George Sage who invent interesting new social systems. One rainy day, George slaps together a new social system that is quickly recognized as being good... and eventually it takes over the whole world.
original cover art by Walt Miller |
Arriving in the future, John meets a man of the future, Crawden, who had hoped that the time machine would bring B. F. Skinner into the future. John tells Crawden, "I've done some experimental work myself on Hieronymous machines." "John Sze's Future" was apparently Pierce's way of mocking editor John W. Campbell's (John "C" = John Sze) interest in "psionics".
cover art by Frank R. Paul |
You might wonder why Pierce would mock Campbell in this way. Pierce had published an essay called "How to Build a Thinking Machine" in the same 1950 issue of Astounding where Campbell had proclaimed Dianetics as a great advance in medical science.
1929 contest cover art by Frank R. Paul. 1930 biographical blurb about Pierce (right). |
Astounding interior art by M. Marchioni |
As told in "Pre-Vision", Hardy is a brilliant pulp science hero who invents a device that allows him to View future events. Using the Viewer, he is able to change the course of Time and Hardy saves a woman from being killed in an accident.
I think "John Sze's Future" is a
daring story because Campbell was still a powerful force in the science
fiction world in 1962. In his introduction to the story, Groff Conklin
noted that several publishers had previously turned the story down.
Conklin was amazed that other people had refused the story and he
praised it as being "subtle and sharp".
cover art by Tom Ryan |
14. "Kid Anderson" (1956) by R. S. Richardson. I've previously blogged about "The Aphrodite Project", a fake astronomy article by Richardson. "Kid Anderson" features a robot that gets used for training a boxer (see Figure 0, at the top of this page). The story was originally published in Space Science Fiction Magazine, but it is hard for me to imagine why Conklin thought it was worthy of being re-published in his anthology.
15. "Pilot Lights of the Apocalypse" (1946) by Louis N. Ridenour. Apparently, "Pilot Lights of the Apocalypse" was first published in January 1946 in Fortune. The story depicts a future planet Earth at a time when all industrialized nations have atomic bombs ready for retaliatory strikes on anyone who starts a war.
cover art by Carolus Thole |
Sadly, in 1946, "Pilot Lights of the Apocalypse" was
too "far out" for most Americans to understand. Ridenour could not
precisely envision the future of the nuclear arms race, but he invented a
fairly good approximation of where the world got to with Mutually Assured Destruction. Later, in 1959, Level 7
was published, and I suspect that most people could finally understand
that it made no sense to keep building more and more nuclear weapons
that could be delivered to targets ever more quickly.
1947 cover art by Charles Schneeman |
I've long wondered what Karel ÄŒapek has in mind for the "manufacturing" of the "robots" in R. U. Robots. In 1947, Davis published "Letter to Ellen" in Astounding.
That story is set in a future time when artificial life can be crafted
in laboratories. The narrator of the story has discovered that he is a
"robot", an artificial man who was made in a lab.
interior art by Edd Cartier |
I have to wonder why Davis, a mathematician, tried to write a science fiction story about a futuristic genetic engineering project. In 1962, nobody had any idea how to actually make an artificial organism, so I'll award Davis bonus points for going ahead an writing "Letter to Ellen" from such a position of ignorance.
I've previously described 1950 - 1983 as the "Uranium Age" of science fiction. Groff Conklin's 1962 anthology Great Science Fiction by Scientists was caught up in the political concerns of that "age". Just because a story is "timely", that does not mean it is "great". Sadly, while Conklin claimed to be collecting great science fiction, I think his choice of stories like "Last Year's Grave Undug" was unduly influenced by issues that were timely, leading to inclusion in the anthology of some stories that were not great.
cover art by Joel Naprstek |
Related Reading: "Invariant" by John R. Pierce... an interesting story about memory storage in brains.
visit the Gallery of Book and Magazine Covers |
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