
Malcolm Jameson (1891–1945)
Author of Bullard of the Space Patrol
About the Author
Works by Malcolm Jameson
Train for Flushing 4 copies
Children of the "Betsy B" 4 copies
Tricky Tonnage 3 copies
Bullard Reflects 3 copies
Doubled and Redoubled 3 copies
The Giant Atom 3 copies
Pride 3 copies
White Mutiny 3 copies
Admiral's Inspection 3 copies
Brimstone Bill 2 copies
Orders 2 copies
The Bureaucrat 2 copies
Murder in the Time World 2 copies
Land of the Burning Sea 2 copies
Devil's Powder 2 copies
Joshua’s Battering Ram 2 copies
Philtered Power 2 copies
Prospectors of Space 2 copies
Hobo God 2 copies
Heaven Is What You Make It 2 copies
Blockade Runner 2 copies
Eviction By Isotherm 2 copies
Taa the Terrible 1 copy
Blind Man's Buff 1 copy
The Old Ones Hear 1 copy
Dead End 1 copy
Not According to Dante 1 copy
Catalyst Poison 1 copy
In His Own Image 1 copy
A Question of Salvage 1 copy
Even the Angels 1 copy
Short Fiction Collection 1 copy
Stellar Showboat 1 copy
4.5BEros 1 copy
If You're Smart-- 1 copy
Sand 1 copy
Anachron, Inc. 1 copy
Barrius, Imp 1 copy
Vengeance in Her Bones 1 copy
The Goddess' Legacy 1 copy
When Is When 1 copy
The Monster Out of Space 1 copy
Quicksands of Youthwardness 1 copy
The Anarch 1 copy
Blind Alley 1 copy
Chariots Of San Fernando 1 copy
Brains for Bricks 1 copy
The Giftie Gien 1 copy
Associated Works
Rivals of Weird Tales: 30 Great Fantasy & Horror Stories from the Weird Fiction Pulps (1990) — Contributor — 97 copies, 1 review
The Infinite Arena: Seven Science Fiction Stories About Sports (1977) — Contributor — 75 copies, 1 review
Beyond Human Ken: 21 Startling Stories of Science Fiction and Fantasy (1952) — Contributor — 20 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Jameson, Malcolm
- Legal name
- Jameson, Malcolm Routh
- Birthdate
- 1891-12-21
- Date of death
- 1945-04-16
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- science fiction writer
- Organizations
- United States Navy
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Waco, Texas, USA
- Place of death
- Bronx, New York, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Published in 1951 this collection of nine stories feature lieutenant Bullard in the first story, but we leave him as Grand Admiral in the final one. These short science fiction tales appeared in the pulp magazine Astounding Stories from April 1940 through to December 1945 - the so-called golden age of science fiction.
The stories are based around the spaceships that house the Space Patrol and are mainly of the problem solving variety. Bullard is a very competent engineer and captain who show more inspires loyalty in his crew. In his first story 'Admirals Inspection', he is new to the crew having been recruited from a cargo carrying vessel. The two day test involves a flight towards the planet Venus and there is fierce competition amongst the crews to perform best. A chemical reaction knocks out all the senior officers and Bullard must use his engineering skills to bring the spaceship back to earth and win the plaudits from the Admiral. In the next story 'White Mutiny' Bullard is a commander who is suffering with his crew working under a captain who does everything by the rule book, even when his procedures are fostering mutiny. Bullard must find a way of turning the tables on his captain.
Malcolm Jameson was an officer in the navy before he started writing science fiction. Probably an engineering background led him to think of a space ship being like an ocean going ship with similar problems. He enhanced the weaponry, the guidance systems based on engineering principles to make it read like an early attempt at hard science fiction. There is hardly an alien in sight and when in the weakest story "Blockade Runner" Jamesons tells a far fetched story of running an alien blockade the story does not work so well. I liked the story Slackers Paradise where the sons of wealthy men serve their time in the service in an old spaceship which has the duty of protecting Wall street from aerial attack. Commander Bullard is not a million miles from being an early pro-to type for Captain James T. Kirk as he runs his crew and spaceship like one sees in the Enterprise.
There is nothing very original here and nine of these stories back to back is a bit of overkill, there is a lack of characterisation and the tales plod a little as the denouement is more often than not achieved by some weird scientific invention. No harm done though and so 2.5 stars. show less
The stories are based around the spaceships that house the Space Patrol and are mainly of the problem solving variety. Bullard is a very competent engineer and captain who show more inspires loyalty in his crew. In his first story 'Admirals Inspection', he is new to the crew having been recruited from a cargo carrying vessel. The two day test involves a flight towards the planet Venus and there is fierce competition amongst the crews to perform best. A chemical reaction knocks out all the senior officers and Bullard must use his engineering skills to bring the spaceship back to earth and win the plaudits from the Admiral. In the next story 'White Mutiny' Bullard is a commander who is suffering with his crew working under a captain who does everything by the rule book, even when his procedures are fostering mutiny. Bullard must find a way of turning the tables on his captain.
Malcolm Jameson was an officer in the navy before he started writing science fiction. Probably an engineering background led him to think of a space ship being like an ocean going ship with similar problems. He enhanced the weaponry, the guidance systems based on engineering principles to make it read like an early attempt at hard science fiction. There is hardly an alien in sight and when in the weakest story "Blockade Runner" Jamesons tells a far fetched story of running an alien blockade the story does not work so well. I liked the story Slackers Paradise where the sons of wealthy men serve their time in the service in an old spaceship which has the duty of protecting Wall street from aerial attack. Commander Bullard is not a million miles from being an early pro-to type for Captain James T. Kirk as he runs his crew and spaceship like one sees in the Enterprise.
There is nothing very original here and nine of these stories back to back is a bit of overkill, there is a lack of characterisation and the tales plod a little as the denouement is more often than not achieved by some weird scientific invention. No harm done though and so 2.5 stars. show less
The scientific double-talk is superlative; and the stories are delightfully less patronizing than many YA SciFi novels I've read. This book is a collection of different stories highlighting the career of John Bullard of the Space Patrol (kind of like Horatio Hornblower). The individual plot lines, actions and character development are a bit simplistic, but they ARE short stories. It's a shame that Jameson didn't have the skill/energy/whatever to stretch them out into full length novels. As show more short stories they're pretty good. show less
One of a series of short, impossible "tall tale" science fiction stories published in the 1940s. This one takes you back to the days when anything was possible, including a base on Pluto. But other than as an example of a bunch of men sitting around swapping stories, it doesn't leave a lasting impression.
Jameson's fourth science fiction tall tale is much more involved than his previous ones. This would have been quite a way to put an end to Nazi Germany.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 68
- Also by
- 23
- Members
- 164
- Popularity
- #129,116
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 12
- ISBNs
- 9













