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Analog 7

by John W. Campbell (Editor)

Other authors: Poul Anderson (Contributor), Verge Foray (Contributor), Frank Herbert (Contributor), Mike Hodous (Contributor), Keith Laumer (Contributor)6 more, Wallace Macfarlane (Contributor), Anne McCaffrey (Contributor), John T. Phillifent (Contributor), Mack Reynolds (Contributor), Bob Shaw (Contributor), Jack Wodhams (Contributor)

Series: Analog (7)

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» See also 2 mentions

Showing 3 of 3
Some good stuff from 1967! There's a couple things you have to remember though. One, the world was a far simpler place then, and this period in time was particularly notable for "tongue in cheek" writing...
Unfortunately not available in electronic formats, as I'd love to post some highlights... ( )
  acb13adm | Sep 13, 2023 |
It has some good stories, some bad ones. Overall pretty good at stoking the imagination. Not a must read, but I don't regret reading it myself. I was in the mood for science fiction and this fit the bill nicely. ( )
  Michael_J | Jun 2, 2022 |
An OK selection of stories from one year's issues of Analog magazine - in this case 1967, and put together here in July 1970. Campbell as an editor certainly wasn't going new wave. This was not much better a collection than Analog 6 which covered the year 1966, and a handful of stories save this from the trash heap. This was a large anthology for the time that included the following:

Aim for the Heel • (1967) • novelette by John T. Phillifent
Fiesta Brava • United Planets • (1967) • novella by Mack Reynolds
Free Vacation • (1967) • short story by Wallace Macfarlane
The Featherbedders • (1967) • novelette by Frank Herbert
Weyr Search • (1967) • novella by Anne McCaffrey
Lost Calling • (1967) • short story by Verge Foray
The Last Command • (1967) • short story by Keith Laumer
Dead End • (1967) • short story by Mike Hodous
There Is a Crooked Man • (1967) • novella by Jack Wodhams
Elementary Mistake • (1967) • short story by Poul Anderson
Burden of Proof • (1967) • short story by Bob Shaw

The blurb on the cover says "Eleven excellent science fiction stories ranging from the ends of the galaxy to the mafia of the future." Hmmm.

My comments on some of the stories: Included in here among the good stories is 'Weyr Search', the first story by Anne McCaffrey in what would become her famous and long running Dragonriders of Pern series. It won the 1968 Hugo award for best novella. I hadn't read it in a very long time and was glad to do so. For a 50 year old tale it held up better than I thought it might. It was the highlight of this collection for me. A bit darker than I remembered but still, this is one of the stories that got my hooked on the genre long ago. Makes me want to try and reread some of the books in the series.

The first story here, "Aim for the Heel" immediately makes me think of Achilles, and the appropriateness of the title didn't dawn on me until the end of this rather old-fashioned but good piece of storytelling. On the downside I thought two of the longest stories were also among the weakest. "Fiesta Brava" annoyed me, increasingly, until I gave up on it. I can't believe people read and enjoyed stuff like that one! Then, “There is a Crooked Man” by Jack Wodhams was just a bit too creepy as well as uninteresting so I didn't finish this one either. Some people must think it worthwhile however because the story is included in a large anthology of 50 years of the best Australian Science Fiction Writing published in 2005.

Frank Herbert's The Featherbedders" and Verge Foray's "Lost Calling" were both entertaining with a bit of humor to them. Laumer's Bolo tale about a buried tank coming to life to fight its last battle was also pretty good and also a bit touching. The last story, "Burden of Proof" was Bob Shaw's follow-up to the superb "Light of Other Days." I thought it good, but I am biased in favor of the slow glass stories and Bob Shaw's storytelling.

Overall too much space was wasted on poor stories but there were some good ones. ( )
  RBeffa | Jun 11, 2017 |
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» Add other authors

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Campbell, John W.Editorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Anderson, PoulContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Foray, VergeContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Herbert, FrankContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Hodous, MikeContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Laumer, KeithContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Macfarlane, WallaceContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
McCaffrey, AnneContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Phillifent, John T.Contributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Reynolds, MackContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Shaw, BobContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Wodhams, JackContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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Andrew Mellish stood in a dark room he had never been in before, and would probably never visit again.
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From Free Vacation: “A little distance,” quoted a fat man beside Layard. “Hoak-hoak-hoeek! Twenty light-years, a little distance, well-well.” “You know where we’re going?” asked Layard. “We are going to take a walk over an unknown planet,” said the fat man. “An outing tour in exotic surroundings with all expenses paid. Hee-hee-heek.” He seemed genuinely amused. His eyes crinkled and his shoulders shook when he chuckled. “But twenty light-years – “ ‘Or two hundred twenty. Who cares? It’s going to take you four weeks subjective time.” He was the fattest man Layard had ever seen, not tall and not flabby, but with an immense waistline. “For the trip they put you in stasis. You could be back here in three elapsed months, or two years. For any one point destination in Gonzalan space, the longest recorded trip is two hundred eight-four days. Where have you been, boy? You must be a Boondocker.” “What are the chances of getting back?” “It’s been running nine point four the last five years. But there was a planet sixteen years ago where only one man made it. The explorers took a fair good look, but there was a seasonal hatch of a desiccated bug whose first requirement for survival was liquid, and it wasn’t particular what. About as big as a sparrow and teeth enough for a tiger. Nasty round sucking mouth. Blood killed the bug, but that wasn’t much consolation to a drained corpse. Ho-ho,” he sighed, “sixteen years ago.” “ How come you know so much about it?” The crowd was thinning away from the Space Services door toward the security of the other. The fat man did not smile. “I spent two weeks in a river.”
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