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Robert P. Mills (1) (1920–1986)

Author of The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 9th Series

For other authors named Robert P. Mills, see the disambiguation page.

62+ Works 1,201 Members 8 Reviews

Series

Works by Robert P. Mills

A Decade of Fantasy and Science Fiction (1960) — Editor — 157 copies, 1 review
The Worlds of Science Fiction (1963) — Editor — 118 copies, 1 review
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 10th Series (1961) — Editor — 50 copies, 1 review
Venture Science Fiction May 1957 (1957) — Editor — 7 copies
Venture Science Fiction January 1958 (1958) — Editor — 6 copies
Venture Science Fiction May 1958 (1958) — Editor — 5 copies
Venture Science Fiction September 1957 (1957) — Editor — 5 copies

Associated Works

Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine - 1954/11 — Contributor, some editions — 5 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

10 reviews
- "Operation Ladybird" by Jay Williams. An invasion of Venus isn't what it seems. The writer seems a little oblivious to anything other than the particular points he set out to make. It's not boring, though. 2.5/4 (Okay).

- "The Ultimate Split Second" (science column) by Isaac Asimov. Asimov has a novel way of helping people visualize how short various impossibly-short fractions of time are. It doesn't occur to him that people who don't already understand this have no reason to care. 1/4 show more (Bad).

- "Day at the Beach" by Carol Emshwiller. Four years after a nuclear apocalypse, an family desperately tries to have a normal day out. This is very relatable in 2022. 3/4 (Good).

- "The Walker-Through-Walls" by Marcel Aymé. An uninteresting man discovers he is able to walk through walls. It's not much of a story, but it has an amusing delivery. 3/4 (Good).

- "Brave to Be a King" by Poul Anderson. A time-traveler accidentally becomes emperor of Persia. It's three or four times as long as it has any reason to be. There's some action and adventure, but not enough to keep it interesting. And in the end the whole thing basically boils down to a set-up for a misogynist "joke." 1/4 (Bad).

- "The Rosebud" by Ray Russell. A baby has a third ear because "evolution." What? 0/4 (Terrible).

- "The Innocence of Evil" (books column) by Damon Knight. A review of two horror collections digresses into speculation about why the genre is coming back into popularity after 15 years. It's all BS, but it's somewhat fascinating to see the perspective of someone from a time when horror was apparently not popular. I didn't know that was a thing. 2.5/4 (Okay).

- "Ferdinand Feghoot: XVII" by Grendel Briarton. Another joke getting paid by the word. The first few paragraphs of this aren't even related to the eventual pun. 1/4 (Bad).

- "Empty Nest" by Kit Reed. A nosy woman's neighbor is some sort of bird monster? Or maybe just related to bird monsters? It doesn't make any sense. 0/4 (Terrible).

- "Me" (verse) by Hilbert Schenck, Jr. 1/4 (Bad).

- "Obituary" by Isaac Asimov. An abusive husband is determined to be a famous physicist, or else. It's a crime story set in a sci-fi scenario where Asimov gets to invent all the arbitrary rules he wants, to suit his murder twist. That doesn't work. 1.5/4 (Meh).

- "Pact" by Winston P. Sanders. A demon summons a human. Cute concept, but it doesn't quite work as a story. 2.5/4 (Okay).

(Mar. 2022)
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- "A Different Purpose" by Kem Bennett. The first person in orbit deals with the psychological effects of isolation. This is surprisingly realistic (especially for this magazine), with regards to both science and psychology. 3/4 (Good).

- "Air Space Violated" (poem) by P.M. Hubbard. 1.5/4 (Meh).

- "Bewitched" by Michael Fessier. A witch turns a shy young woman into a cat-person. A modern fairytale with an offbeat sense of humor. 3/4 (Good).

- "Dust of Ages" (science column) by Isaac Asimov. show more Speculation about how the moon might be covered in mountains of dust. Yeah, this did not age well. 2/4 (Indifferent).

- "Critical Angle" by A. Bertram Chandler. The first men on the moon sink into the dust. Following both an article that already covers its central idea, as well as a well-researched story about very-near-future space travel (as opposed to this, which is lazy and not at all researched), this story is not served well by its context in the magazine. 1/4 (Bad).

- "Or the Grasses Grow" by Avram Davidson. New right-wing government policy steals the reservation from a small Native American tribe. It's not racist, despite being written by a white guy in 1958, but it's also not particularly interesting. 2.5/4 (Okay).

- "Wildcat" by Poul Anderson. A top-secret oil field is located in the Jurassic period. The dinosaur-fighting action/adventure elements are pretty great, but the plot is a cold-war conspiracy that thinks its more mysterious/clever than it is. 2.5/4 (Okay).

- Recommended Reading (department) by Anthony Boucher. 2/4 (Indifferent).

- "Beans" by Jack Williamson. A long set-up to a bad pun. 2/4 (Indifferent).

- "Mr. Milton's Gift" by Robert Arthur. A man is cursed with the ability to "make money," and also cursed to speak in verse (there was a two for one sale). Towards the end, the author stops bothering to write out the character's previously-amusing dialog. 2.5/4 (Okay).

- "Pelt" by Carol Emshwiller. Fur-hunting in space, from the perspective of a dog. It would have been pretty interesting, if the editor's introduction hadn't spoiled it - and if the concept of fur-hunting in the future didn't seem absurd. 2.5/4 (Okay).

- "For Analysis" by P. Schuyler Miller. Something to do with the space race, I guess? I don't even know what this is. 0/4 (Terrible).

- "Nine Yards of Other Cloth" by Manly Wade Wellman. A pioneer-era-set folktale about a bad man with a fiddle in the valley of a monster. The genuine old-timey style of this story is a delight. Apparently it's the conclusion of a series. Excuse me, I need to go find out if they've been released as a book. 3/4 (Good).

[correction: "Nine Yards of Other Cloth" is apparently not pioneer-era, just feels that way. Also, except for an audio version, the books are not currently available, despite being some of the most striking and influential fantasy/horror ever written.]
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½
- "The Red Hills of Summer" by Edgar Pangborn. A colony ship's advance expedition studies and explores an alien world. It doesn't have any original ideas, or much of a story, or good science. I like a space adventure, though. 2.5/4 (Okay).

- "Varieties of the Infinite" (science column) by Isaac Asimov. Asimov explains the concept of infinity. He spends a frustratingly long amount of time repeating himself, seemingly convinced that no one will believe him. The last few pages get into some show more interesting concepts that were new to me. 2.5/4 (Okay).

- "Quintet" by various authors. Five brief stories or poems, written either by 12-year-old children or famous authors writing as 12-year-old children: you guess which is which. It's pretty embarrassing for this magazine that these are easily the strongest stories in it. 3/4 (Good).

- "The Devil's Garden" by Robert Arthur. An Englishman is tormented by a magical Indian beggar. This is a republication of an older British story (from 1941). Perhaps the editor was frustrated by modern (1959) American writers not being openly and pointlessly racist enough. 0/4 (Terrible).

- "To Give Them Beauty for Ashes" (verse) by Winona McClintic. 1.5/4 (Meh).

- "Who Is Going to Cut the Barber's Hair?" by Will Stanton. A man wants to go to a cocktail party, but something else is sent in his place. I can't tell if this is meant to be surrealist, or if the writing is just too bad to be coherent. 0/4 (Terrible).

- "Nor Custom Stale" by Joanna Russ. A retired couple is isolated in their automated home. It's bad with storytelling and logic. There's no character writing to speak of. But it's good at conveying an unsettling feeling. 2/4 (Indifferent).

- "Snip, Snip" (verse) by Hilbert Schenck, Jr. 1/4 (Bad).

- "Interview with a Dead Man" by Robert Graves. An animated corpse communicates from inside his tomb. I don't know why any of this is happening. 1/4 (Bad).

- "The Makers of Destiny" by Edward S. Aarons. People with mindpowers train and brainwash a new agent and try to control the fate of post-Nuclear America. This often feels like it was written by an AI, shuffling together bad tropes. 1.5/4 (Meh).

- "Ferdinand Feghood: XVIII" by Grendel Briarton. 0/4 (Terrible).

- "Game with a Goddess" by Leslie Bonnet. A monk charms the statue of a Goddess. It has cute moments, but no point. 2/4 (Indifferent).

(Apr. 2022)
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- "What Rough Beast?" by Damon Knight. A man is able to change reality by pulling things out of parallel universes. It's the standard Twilight Zone style I expect from MFSF, albeit with an original idea with some thought put into it. 3/4 (Good).

- "Love Those Zeroes" (science column) by Isaac Asimov. He literally just explains what large numbers are, for six pages. 1/4 (Bad).

- "Graveyard Shift" by Idris Seabright. The night clerk at Bloom's 24-Hour Sportsman's Emporium tries to survive the show more dark horrors of yet another shift. 3.5/4 (Very good).

- "No Matter Where You Go" by Joel Townsley Rogers. A romantic melodrama involving an interdimensional traveler. Joel Townsley Rogers would appear to be a gibbering idiot. 0/4 (Terrible).

- "Snitkin's Law" by Eleazar Lipsky. A sleazy lawyer is recruited to save the distant future. Cute. 2.5/4 (Okay).

- "Death Cannot Wither" by Judith Merril. A woman terrified of pregnancy is happily widowed, until things go unexpectedly wrong. I couldn't always follow this; I suspect some key bits may have been censored, or self-censored. 2/4 (Indifferent).

- "More Brave New Worlds Than One" (books column) by Basil Davenport. This guy wants to know if you've ever heard of some of the most popular books ever written, because, apparently, they exist. 0/4 (Terrible).

- "Misfit" by G.C. Edmondson. Some people chat with a time-traveler over dinner. Edmondson seems to have several points he wants to make, but doesn't communicate well - and also doesn't bother telling a story. 1/4 (Bad).

- "Nothing But Love" by George P. Elliott. From Venus... A Warning And An Ultimatum! It's a blatant Day The Earth Stood Still rip-off. The aliens have their own gimmick, but even that was apparently already used by the author in a different story. 1.5/4 (Meh).

- "Ghost Planet" by Charles L. Fontenay. A small expedition visits Earth's long-abandoned Martian colony. There's some good adventure, but Fontenay's lack of understanding of basic science concepts would embarrass even Edgar Rice Burroughs. 2/4 (Indifferent).

- "Natural Frequency" by Raymond E. Banks. An alien diplomat has a dangerously loud voice. I guess this is meant to be funny, but it is really, really not. 0/4 (Terrible).

- "Ferdinand Feghoot: XI" by Grendel Briarton. An unnecessarily long set-up to a bad pun. I like bad puns, but this is clearly a joke getting paid by the word. 1/4 (Bad).

- "The Willow Tree" by Jane Rice. Orphaned children are sent to live with some relatives in the past. It doesn't quite make sense, but also doesn't really need to. It's got great folktale and gothic horror atmosphere. 3/4 (Good).

(Jun. 2021)
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Lists

1960s (1)

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Associated Authors

Avram Davidson Contributor, Editor
Anthony Boucher Editor, Contributor
Gordon R. Dickson Contributor
Isaac Asimov Contributor
Poul Anderson Contributor
Damon Knight Contributor
Alfred Bester Contributor, Epilogue
Theodore Sturgeon Contributor
John Collier Contributor
Howard Fast Contributor
Jane Rice Contributor
Daniel Keyes Contributor
Ward Moore Contributor
George P. Elliott Contributor
Robert A. Heinlein Contributor
Robert F. Young Contributor
Ron Goulart Contributor
Clifford D. Simak Contributor
Winston P. Sanders Contributor
Grendel Briarton Contributor
Mel Hunter Cover artist
Rosser Reeves Contributor
Charles G. Finney Contributor
Evelyn E. Smith Contributor
Charles Henneberg Contributor
Jody Scott Contributor
Jay Williams Contributor
William Tenn Contributor
Brian W. Aldiss Contributor
C. S. Lewis Contributor
Kem Bennett Contributor
Walter S. Tevis Contributor
Lee Sutton Contributor
Winona McClintic Contributor
R. M. McKenna Contributor
John Anthony Contributor
Raymond E. Banks Contributor
Mildred Clingerman Contributor
Oliver La Farge Contributor
J. Francis McComas Contributor
Idris Seabright Contributor
Antony Boucher Contributor
Guy Endore Contributor
John Novtny Contributor
Ogden Nash Contributor
Horace Walpole Contributor
Zenna Henderson Contributor
Manly Wade Wellman Contributor
John Masefield Contributor
Niall Wilde Contributor
Holley Cantine Contributor
R. V. Cassill Contributor
Ray Bradbury Contributor
James Blish Contributor
Mark Van Doren Contributor
Cordwainer Smith Contributor
Jr. Kurt Vonnegut Contributor
John Berry Contributor
John Anthony West Contributor
Richard M. Mckenna Contributor
Robert Murray Contributor
Will Worthington Contributor
Katherine MacLean Contributor
Allen Drury Contributor
Vance Aandahl Contributor
Anthony Brode Contributor
Marcel Ayme Contributor
Kurt Vonnegut Contributor
C. M. Kornbluth Contributor
Rosel George Brown Contributor
George Langelaan Contributor
Frederik Pohl Contributor
Robert Nathan Contributor
Mark Clifton Contributor
Charles Beaumont Contributor
Stephen Barr Contributor
Gerard E. Neyroud Contributor
Robert Graves Contributor
J. T. McIntosh Contributor
Richard Matheson Contributor
Edgar Pangborn Contributor
Ed Emsh Cover artist
Ed Emshwiller Cover artist
G. C. Edmondson Contributor
Ray Russell Contributor
Randall Garrett Contributor
Carol Emshwiller Contributor
Kit Reed Contributor
Herbert Gold Contributor
David R. Bunch Contributor
R. Bretnor Contributor
Algis Budrys Contributor
P. M. Hubbard Contributor
Floyd Wallace Contributor
Hilbert Schenck Contributor
Norman Belkin Contributor
Ed Emshwiller Cover artist
Doris Pitkin Buck Contributor
Fritz Wegner Cover artist
Richard M. Powers Cover artist
Graham Greene Contributor
Jack Gaughan Illustrator
Roger Zimmerman Cover artist
Bob Schinella; Cover artist
Jack Gaughn Cover artist

Statistics

Works
62
Also by
2
Members
1,201
Popularity
#21,368
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
8
ISBNs
30

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