Two classics about viewing the past
- “Light of Other
Days” by Bob Shaw. (Note: The
opening comment is from the anthology I used to OCR the
story.) Personally, I wouldn't classify this story with other
“pastwatching” stories (such as Kuttner's
“Private Eye” or Asimov's “The Dead
Past” or Knight's tour-de-force below), but Baxter and
Clarke do, and named their novel after it, so who am I to
argue? It was nominated for a Nebula, but lost to a story that
is rather less well known today. It is also included in Shaw's
novel Other Days, Other Eyes, one of my picks for
the Ten Best SF Books of all time.
- “I See You” by Damon
Knight. A brilliant short work that (IMHO) compresses an SF
novel's worth of ideas into a fairly small number of pages. As
of this writing, I haven't finished Baxter & Clarke's
novel yet, so I don't know how it compares.
(Note: The text here is a combination of the
version printed in Donald Wollheim's The 1977 Annual
World's Best SF and the version from Knight's
relatively recent collection One Side Laughing.
The introductory comment is Knight's.)
Just for fun....
Five short-shorts from Fredric Brown. For $29 you can get
these, and every other SF & Fantasy short Fredric
Brown wrote; the book is NESFA Press's
just-released From These Ashes.
- “Answer” —
probably his best-known
- “Imagine” —
NESFA used this as the rear-cover blurb of From These
Ashes
- “Naturally” —
about the dangers of too much studying
- “Voodoo” — about
a quick alternative to a messy divorce
- “The End” — the
title says it all!