Showing posts with label 1948. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1948. Show all posts

Thursday, April 10, 2014

John R Pierce's "Period Piece" (as by J J Coupling) (short story)

A modern man finds himself in 31st century, with no recollection of how he got there. He's being treated very well & kindly, but he's smelling something fishy - why's is no one curious about the period he's come from, not even an eminent historian?

Very curious & unexpected ending.

Collected in.

  1. Everett F Bleiler & T E Dikty (eds)' "The Best Science Fiction Stories: 1949".

Fact sheet.

First published: Astounding, November 1948.
Rating: A.
Among the stories from Astounding/Analog issues edited by John Campbell.
Related: Stories of John R Pierce.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Martin Gardner's "Thang" (flash fiction, free): Big fish eats smaller one; & is food to bigger one

This is a very minor story, though apparently a well known one.

A giant, cosmic scale creature called Thang eats up earth for breakfast! And then gets eaten up by something even bigger.

Collected in.

  1. Everett F Bleiler & T E Dikty (eds)' "The Best Science Fiction Stories: 1949".

Fact sheet.

First published: 1948. ("for his college literary magazine").
Download full text.
Rating: C.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Isaac Asimov's "No Connection" (short story, puzzle, free)

Millions of years into future, man is long extinct. The world has two dominant intelligent races:
  1. Americas dominated with "Gurrows", intelligent descendents of bears;
  2. Rest of the world dominated by "Eekahs", intelligent descendents of chimpanzees.
Eekahs are far more technologically advanced, are aware that Americas are sparsely populated, & are planning raids to claim that land.

This is the story from the point of view of a Gurrow archeologist who knows a bit about the long extinct man (the "Primate Primeval"). And of his seriously incomplete piecing together of the history of the continent & what lays ahead as they come into more frequent contact with Eekahs...

Collected in.

  1. Everett F Bleiler & T E Dikty (eds)' "The Best Science Fiction Stories: 1949".

Fact sheet.

First published: Astounding, June 1948.
Download full text from AlfaLib.
Rating: A.
Related: Stories of Isaac Asimov.

Poul Anderson's "Genius" (novelette, superman): Who is observing whom, in this lab experiment?

Quote from short story Genius by Poul Anderson
This is said to be the "first stand alone piece of short fiction" by Anderson.

I personally found it a somewhat boring read. Content of the story is mostly in the form of infodump - a character lecturing another one, plus description of author's idea of a utopia.

Story summary.

In far future, human empire extends to tens of thousands of planets in galaxy, has some interactions with alien empires, & it is a fairly static society with thought conditioning of populace to ensure they don't think inconvenient thoughts.

And the "psychotechnological" ruling elite conduct laboratory experiments on humans, as one would on rats: dump a couple of thousand men, matching some profile, with their memories wiped out, into some experimental environment, & observe their behavior!

One such experiment has been going on for 1500 years on "Station Seventeen": a virgin earth-like world, complete with a moon, seeded with a few thousand geniuses. And the experiment didn't turn out the way the experimenters expected...

Collected in.

  1. Everett F Bleiler & T E Dikty (eds)' "The Best Science Fiction Stories: 1949".

Fact sheet.

First published: Astounding, December 1948.
Download MP3 of an old time radio drama based on this story titled "Planet of Geniuses". [via SFFaudio]
Rating: B.
Related: Stories of Poul Anderson.

Everett F Bleiler & T E Dikty (eds)' "The Best Science Fiction Stories: 1949" (anthology): Annotatated table of contents & review

Cover of short story anthology The Best Science Fiction Stories 1949, edited by Everett F Bleiler and T E DiktyAccording to Wikipedia, "It was the first published anthology to present the best science fiction stories for a given year. The stories had originally appeared in 1948 in the magazines".

Several well known classics here. I seem to have read several of these years back; currently reading just the half dozen unread ones.

Table of contents.

  1. [ss] Ray Bradbury's "Mars is Heaven!" (A); download radio adaptation; Planet Stories, Fall 1948.
  2. [novelette] Henry Kuttner & C L Moore's "Ex Machina" (as by Lewis Padgett); Astounding, April 1948: One of the funny Galleghar stories. I read it long back; don't recollect much now.
  3. [ss] Murray Leinster's "The Strange Case of John Kingman" (A); Astounding, May 1948: First contact, but no space ships, no space travel, not even any obvious aliens...
  4. [ss] Erik Fennel's "Doughnut Jockey"; Blue Book, May 1948: Don't recollect anything now.
  5. [ss] Martin Gardner's "Thang" (C); download: Big fish eats smaller one; & is food to even bigger one...
  6. [ss] John R Pierce's "Period Piece" (as by J J Coupling) (A); Astounding, November 1948: A modern man in 31st century makes a curious discovery.
  7. [ss] Fredric Brown's "Knock" (A); download text/radio adaptation; Thrilling Wonder Stories, December 1948: A smart man reclaims earth from invincible aliens.
  8. [novelette] Poul Anderson's "Genius" (B); download radio adaptation; Astounding, December 1948: When lab "animals" were observing their experimenters...
  9. [novelette] Ray Bradbury's "And the Moon be Still as Bright" (A); download radio adaptation; Thrilling Wonder Stories, June 1948: Some Mars colonists are feeling guilty...
  10. [ss] Isaac Asimov's "No Connection"; download; Astounding, June 1948: Planning a second taking of Americas, from across the pond...
  11. [novelette] Wilmar H Shiras' "In Hiding" (A); Astounding, November 1948: A young boy who's "different" is forced to conform...
  12. [novelette] Henry Kuttner's "Happy Ending" (A); Thrilling Wonder Stories, August 1948; humor: When a man got what he "desired"!

Fact sheet.

First published: 1949.
Related: Works of Everett F Bleiler; anothologies & collections; fiction from 1940s.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Fredric Brown's "Knock" (short story, alien invasion, free)

Going by the comments online, it appears to be among the better known stories of Brown. Not a very believable conclusion, but light fun read.

Story summary.

Aliens called "Zan" have raided earth. They took a few hundred animal specimen alive - among them a man & a woman, & killed off all other life on earth. These specimen, including the humans, have now been put as exhibits in a zoo on earth, & this advanced raiding party of aliens is preparing to claim earth as permanent residence.

The man will pull off a coup of sorts, scaring aliens enough with his
ingenuity to make them leave earth...

Collected in.

  1. Everett F Bleiler & T E Dikty (eds)' "The Best Science Fiction Stories: 1949".

Fact sheet.

First published: Thrilling Wonder Stories, December 1948.
Download full text.
Download audio of X Minus One radio adaptation of this story from Internet Archive. (alt MP3 link)
Rating: A.
Related: Stories of Fredric Brown.

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Donald B Day's "Jaephus" (short story, humor, free)

Illustration accompanying the original publication in Fanscient magazine of short story Jaephus by Donald B Day. Image shows the lobbly Jaephus with a glass of beer.Adventures of a man with a "lobbly" named Jaephus - a naughty invisible, presumably intelligent, creature with wings, tentacles & other unusual anatomical features.

Fact sheet.

First published: Fanscient, Fall 1948.
Download full text as part of the magazine it originally appeared in, or read online as HTML.
Rating: B.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Henry Kuttner's "Extrapolation" (short story, satire, free): Science fiction vs fantasy wars in fandom

One of the illustrations by John Grossman accompanying the original publication in Fanscient magazine of short story Extrapolation by Henry Kuttner. Image shows the cover of Geared Tales, an imaginary science fiction magazine in future.Author tells us why there won't be any science fiction or fantasy magazines after 1958, a decade after this story was published.

He's using some sort of prescience to find this, but no details are given. And there is suggestion it's not humans doing the editing in 1958, just before the end of the genre.

Fact sheet.

First published: Fanscient, Fall 1948.
Download full text as part of the magazine it originally appeared in, or read online as HTML.
Rating: B.
Related: Stories of Henry Kuttner.

"Fanscient", Fall 1948 (ed Donald B Day) (magazine, free): Annotated table of contents & review

Cover of fanzine Fanscient, Fall 1948 issue. Uncredited image shows a photograph of JaephusLink on author fetches more of his fiction. Where I have a separate post on a story, link on story title goes there. Where I've read a story, my rating appears in brackets.

Table of contents (best first).

  1. [ss] Henry Kuttner's "Extrapolation" (B); satire: Science fiction vs fantasy wars in fandom.
  2. [ss] Donald B Day's "Jaephus" (B); humor.
  3. [ss] Miles Eaton's "The Watcher in the Snow" (C); fantasy: Snowclad approach to a beautiful & mysterious city is infested with ferocious & strange "beasts", with upper part human female & lower part a giant centipede.

Fact sheet.

Labeled: "Vol 2 No 3 (Whole No 5)".
Download scans as a cbz file or pdf. (I haven't tried pdf) [via judgemagney@pbscans]
Or read online as HTML.
Related: Fiction from 1940s; old pulps.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Henry Kuttner & C L Moore's "The Mask of Circe" (novel, supermen, free): Gods of Greek mythology are actually mutants & machines!

One of the illustrations accompanying the original publication in Startling Stories magazine of the the novel The Mask of Circe by Henry Kuttner and C L Moore.This is an adventure - a science fictional retelling of some Greek legends. But an adventure more in line with "doc" Smith's soap opera - enjoy the unbelievable fun ride but don't think much, please. I didn't enjoy first half - there is just too much unfamiliar Greek mythology, but second half was easy to follow.

Story summary.

A modern man, while playing subject for a new sedative drug, ends up importing the memories of a long dead ancestor from 3000 years ago! And through much of the story, he is magically transported back 3000 years, to the time of this ancestor - to have adventures in time of Greek legend.

Notes.

  1. Some commentators have noted that this story is a tribute to Abraham Merritt's "Ship of Ishtar". I haven't personally read this Merritt story.
  2. "Mask" of title refers to a machine that holds the brain dump of someone long dead; its wearer assumes the personality of that long dead individual. "Circe" of title is a women who fell in love with the hero, hero who won't be born for another 3000 years! "Mask" is to help her meet him when he's eventually born!

Fact sheet.

First published: Startling Stories, May 1948.
Read online at UNZ.
Rating: B.
Related: Stories of Henry Kuttner, C L Moore.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Eric Frank Russell's "Dreadful Sanctuary" (novel, thriller): Man must not go to space cultists vs hero who says we'll go

Cover of novel Dreadful Sanctuary by Eric Frank Russell. Shows a moon rocket exploding as it approaches moon.
This is one of those Fortean stories of Russell ("Sinister Barrier" is his best known of the type) - something above humanity is pulling our puppet strings.

Story summary.

Over a dozen human attempts to reach moon have all failed - rockets exploding when they're about a certain critical distance from moon. It's too much of a coincidence & there is no reason to suspect sabotage; rockets of several countries have met the same fate.

There is a man financially involved in the next rocket to go. And he's smelling conspiracy...

Notes.

  1. Title refers to earth. There is an unreliable back story: Humanity independently evolved on 4 worlds - blacks on Mercury, browns on Venus, yellows on earth, & whites on Mars (skin color depends on their distance from sun). All civilizations except earth reach maturity a long long time ago, & banished war. But they still had crazies who were not cured of need to war. They were herded on 3 worlds, & transported to earth to rid the mother worlds of them - back when earthmen were really primitive. So earth is a prison planet & all except those of yellow skin are descended from the crazies dumped here!

Fact sheet.

First published: Astounding, June/July/August 1948.
Rating: B. 
Among the stories edited by John Campbell for Astounding/Analog. 
Related: Stories of Eric Frank Russell (annotated list).

Friday, June 15, 2012

Eric Frank Russell's "Muten" (as by Duncan H Munro) (short story, humor): Fun transporting an intelligent talking horse

US government's Board of Social Survey keeps a record of country's mutants. Now they've got a call for a possible mutant, & Steven Yule is dispatched to investigate it. He finds the mutant all right, only it's a horse - an intelligent talking horse! A lot of fun transporting him to government's labs...

Title is mutant mispronounced by the farmer in whose stables talking horse was born.

See also.

  1. James Blish's "How Beautiful With Banners" (download): Another story where the resolution is primarily by sexual arousal.

Fact sheet.

First published: Astounding, October 1948.
Rating: A.
Among the stories from Astounding/Analog issues edited by John Campbell.
Related: Stories of Eric Frank Russell (as by Duncan H Munro) (annotated list).

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Eric Frank Russell's "Somewhere a Voice" (collection): Annotated table of contents & review

Cover image of short story collection Somewhere a Voice by Eric Frank Russell
I've not read all stories yet. Will fill up entries as I read.

"Dear Devil" is one of the most loved stories of the genre.

ToC below is in order of my preference, best first. Where I have a separate post on a story, link on title goes there. Where I'm aware of an online copy of the story, I include the link. Links on publisher or year fetch more matching fiction.
  1. [novelette] "Dear Devil" (A); download scans as part of a larger package; Other Worlds, May 1950: Humanity rises from post-nuclear-war apocalypse - with some external help.
  2. [ss] "U-Turn" (as by Duncan H Munro) (B); Astounding, April 1950: State helps a bored man commit "suicide"...  
  3. [novelette] "I Am Nothing" (B); Astounding, July 1952: A ruthless dictator has a change of heart...
  4. [novella] "Somewhere a Voice" (B); Other Worlds, January 1953: Unsuccessful hike to rescue by the stranded.
  5. [ss] "Tieline" (as by Duncan H Munro) (B); Astounding, July 1955: A man alone on an entire planet that houses a space lighthouse is very lonely.
  6. [novelette] "Seat of Oblivion" (B); Astounding, November 1941: What's the best place to hide for a runaway death row convict? In another man's body! 
  7. [ss] "Displaced Person" (B); Weird Tales, September 1948; religion: Some revolutionaries aren't welcome anywhere.

Fact sheet.

First published: 1965.
Related: Stories of Eric Frank Russell.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Sidney Austen's "The Frightened Planet" (short story, free): Stone-age earthman helps aliens regain their lost empire

Illustration accompanying the original publication in Amazing Stories magazine of short story The Frightened Planet by Sidney Austen
I loved it, in spite of its juvenile appeal & general unbelievableness. Some stories just hook the reader.

Caution: Story include commentary on male/female relations that violates modern sensibilities.

Story summary.

Karn of Tur, a stone age earthman, alone in the wilderness after a fight with his cave leader, will end up saving the lives of 3 visiting aliens from wild beasts & then traveling with them to their world, Mahlo.

Now Mahlo is a degenerate world. Space-faring folks with great cities are basically cowards, & quickly fall to spear-wielding lizard-men ("Green Ones") from their jungles. Karn will teach them bravery & help them regain their world back.

Fact sheet.

First published: Amazing Stories, October 1948.
Download full text from Project Gutenberg, Manybooks, Internet Archive.
Rating: A.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

New at Project Gutenberg (29 August 2010)

Links on author, publisher, or year fetch more matching fiction.

  1. [novel] Howard Browne's "The Return of Tharn"; download; Amazing Stories, October-December 1948: "When Tharn set out to rescue his beloved Dylara, he did not dream   the whole Cro-Magnon world opposed him".
Related: Fiction from old "pulps".

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

New at Project Gutenberg (24 August 2010)

Links on author, publisher, or year fetch more matching fiction.

  1. Sidney Austen's "The Frightened Planet"; download; Amazing Stories, October 1948: "Karn was only a savage, but he knew a thing or two about the way justice should be meted out--and he did it".
  2. [novel] Jules Verne's "Abandoned"; download: Translated by W H G Kingston from original French version titled "L'Abandonné". This novel is "the second in the Mysterious Island triad". "L'Abandonné, like its two companion tales, ran its course as a serial through the Magasin Illustré of education and recreation, before its issue as a boy's story-book."
Related: Fiction from old "pulps".

Friday, July 2, 2010

New at Project Gutenberg (2 July 2010)

Links on author, publisher, or year fetch more matching fiction.

  1. H B Hickey's "The Eye of Wilbur Mook"; download; Amazing Stories, November 1948.
Related: Fiction from old "pulp" magazines.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Berkeley Livingston's "Death of a B.E.M." (short story, humor, free): A parody of bug-eyed monster stories

Illustration accompanying the original publication in Amazing Stories of short story Death of a B.E.M. by Berkeley Livingston
Very funny introduction to bug-eyed monster fiction. From both human & monster perspectives.

Notes.

  1. I used to think that South Indian movies with much parodied style heroes were greatly localized versions adapted from US Western stories. May be they owe far more to bug-eyed monster fiction? Or is the later too drawn from Westerns?

Fact sheet.

First published: Amazing Stories, October 1948.
Download full text from Project Gutenberg, Manybooks, Feedbooks.
Rating: A.
Related: Monster fiction.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

New at Project Gutenberg (19 June 2010)

Links on author, publisher, or year fetch more matching fiction.

  1. P F Costello's "Death Makes A Mistake"; download; Amazing Stories, January 1943: "Mr Demise had Reggie Van Fiddler's name in his book, but Reggie didn't want to be on any list, so he set out to correct the mistake!"
  2. E J Liston's "Castle of Terror"; download; Amazing Stories, November 1948: "What strange dimension was this where giants, gangsters, Lucretia Borgia, dwarfs and Rip Van Winkle lived at the same time?"
  3. Richard Stockham's "Circle of Flight"; download; If, May 1953.
  4. Robert E Gilbert's "Thy Rocks and Rills"; download; If, September 1953: "They were out of place in the Manly Age--Stonecypher, a man who loved animals; Moe, a bull who hated men. Together, they marched to inevitably similar destinies..."
    This has been at BaenCD & Webscription a long time, as part of the anthology "The World Turned Upside Down". I don't think I liked the story, & I don't recollect many details; very brief summary is included in my anthology post.
  5. Henry M Stanley's "My Dark Companions And Their Strange Stories"; download; unknown year of original publication: This looks like a "people telling stories around a campfire" type of thing. I'm not sure whether it's best seen as a short story collection or novel. A cursory glance does suggest it's genre.
Related: Fiction from old "pulp" magazines.

Monday, June 14, 2010

New at Project Gutenberg (14 June 2010)

Links on author, publisher, or year fetch more matching fiction.

  1. Alexander Blade's "The Plotters"; download; Amazing Stories, December 1948: "He came from a far planet to find some of the Earth's secrets. But Marko found other things, too--like his love for beautiful Beth".
  2. Roger Phillips Graham's "Tillie"; download; Amazing Stories, December 1948: 'She was just a blob of metal, but she had emotions like any woman. She, too, wanted ROMANCE, and wasn't coy about running after her "guy"'.
  3. F L Wallace's "The Impossible Voyage Home"; download; Galaxy, August 1954: "The right question kept getting the wrong answer--but old Ethan and Amantha got the right answer by asking the wrong question!"
Related: Fiction from old "pulp" magazines.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

New at Project Gutenberg (13 June 2010)

Links on author, publisher, or year fetch more matching fiction.

  1. J J Allerton's "Once Upon A Planet"; download; Amazing Stories, December 1948: "The mighty King Miotis came down to Earth to recapture his lost desire for war. But what he saw on this planet, caused him to feel differently."
  2. Raymond Z Gallun's "Asteroid of Fear"; download; Planet Stories, March 1951: "All space was electrified as that harsh challenge rang out ... but John Endlich hesitated. For he saw beyond his own murder--saw the horror and destruction his death would unleash--and knew he dared not fight back!"
  3. Richard Sharpe Shaver's "The Dark Goddess"; download; Imagination, February 1953: "Deep within her caverns the great mer-woman longed for death to end her loneliness. But then came a voyager from space--a man--also lonely..."
Related: Fiction from old "pulp" magazines.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

New at Project Gutenberg (6 June 2010)

Links on author, publisher, or year fetch more matching fiction.

  1. Robert Moore Williams' "Planet of the Gods"; download; Amazing Stories, December 1942: "Two planets circling Vega! But a more amazing discovery waited the explorers when they landed!"
  2. [novel] E E Smith's "Triplanetary"; download; 1948: This is chronologically the first book in author's well-known "Lensman" series of space opera.

    Original shorter version of this story that appeared in Amazing Stories in 1934 is already online at Project Gutenberg; newly posted version appears to be a later novelization.
  3. Frank Quattrocchi's "The Sword"; download; If, March 1953: "There were but three days in which to decipher the most cryptic message ever delivered to earth."
  4. Paul W Fairman's "Deadly City"; download; If, March 1953: "You're all alone in a deserted city. You walk down an empty street, yearning for the sight of one living face--one moving figure. Then you see a man on a corner and you know your terror has only begun."
Related: Fiction from old "pulp" magazines.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

New at Project Gutenberg (5 June 2010)

Links on author, publisher, or year fetch more matching fiction.

  1. Chester S Geier's "Cold Ghost"; download; Amazing Stories, November 1948: "All Hager had to do was slow the dogsled to a walk, and his partner died. A perfect crime--no chance to get caught!"
  2. Knut Enferd's "Day of the Druid"; download; Amazing Stories, November 1948: "Be'al, all-powerful god, drank the blood of his victims. Would Gaar be able to save Marna, whom Be'al kept in eternal sleep, and avenge her people?"
  3. Alfred Coppel's "The Invader"; download; Imagination, February 1953: "Invading Earth was going to be a cinch, the Triomed scout decided. But to make certain he must study its inhabitants--as one of them!"
  4. George H Smith's "The Ordeal of Colonel Johns"; download; If, June 1954: "Colonel Johns, that famous Revolutionary War hero, had the unique--and painful--experience of meeting his great-great-great-great granddaughter. Now maybe you can't change history, but what's there to prevent a soldier from changing his mind about the gal he is going to marry?"
  5. Raymond F Jones' "The Colonists"; download; If, June 1954: 'If historical precedent be wrong--what qualities, then, must man possess to successfully colonize new worlds? Doctor Ashby said: "There is no piece of data you cannot find, provided you can devise the proper experimental procedure for turning it up." Now--about the man and the procedure...'
  6. Robert Moore Williams' "The Next Time We Die"; download; Amazing Stories, February 1957: "We journey to far places, driven on by ideals. We fight for lost causes, sacrificing our lives because the things we fight for seem worthwhile. But are we right? Are they worth being killed over? Perhaps. Then again, maybe we'll know better--The Next Time We Die".
Related: Fiction from old "pulp" magazines.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

New at Project Gutenberg (27 May 2010)

Links on author, publisher, or year fetch more matching fiction.

  1. Philip Francis Nowlan's "Armageddon--2419 AD"; download; Amazing Stories, August 1928.
  2. Alexander Blade's "The Brain"; download; Amazing Stories, October 1948: "America's greatest weapon, greater than the Atom Bomb, was its new, gigantic mechanical brain. It filled a whole mountain--and then it came to life...!"
    [via Feedbooks]
  3. Robert Donald Locke's "Deepfreeze"; download; Imagination, January 1953: "Life and the future belong to the strong--so Dollard laughed as he fled Earth and Mankind's death agony. But the last laugh was yet to come..."
  4. Michael Cathal's "Rich Living"; download; Galaxy, Feburary 1955: "No other planet in the entire Galaxy was at all like Rejuvenal ... it was the only world worth one's whole fortune for a short visit!"
  5. Miriam Allen DeFord's "One Way"; download; Galaxy, March 1955: "I thought of every way to save Hal from the Lydna Project and failed ... but the women didn't!"
  6. Charles V De Vet's "Big Stupe"; download; Galaxy, March 1955: "Smart man, Bruckner--he knew how to handle natives ... but they knew even better how to deal with smart terrestrials!"
Related: Fiction from onld "pulp" magazines.

Monday, May 17, 2010

New at Project Gutenberg (17 May 2010)

Links on author, publisher, or year yield more matching fiction.

  1. [novel] Charles Willard Diffin's "Brood of the Dark Moon"; download; Astounding Stories, August/November 1931: "Once more Chet, Walt and Diane are united in a wild ride to the Dark Moon--but this time they go as prisoners of their deadly enemy Schwartzmann."
  2. Berkeley Livingston's "Oogie Finds Love"; download; Amazing Stories, November 1948: "It took a fierce battle with the prehistoric Cro-Magnons, and a modern wrestling match with the Russian Bear, before Oogie, the Caveman, finally won beautiful Sala for his woman".
  3. Lester del Rey's "No Strings Attached"; download; If, June 1954: "Poor Henry was an unhappy husband whose wife had a habit of using bad clichès. Alféar was a genii who was, quite like most humans, a creature of habit. Their murder compact was absolutely perfect, with--"
  4. Raymond F Jones' "Human Error"; download; If, April 1956: "The government was spending a billion dollars to convince the human race that men ought to be ashamed to be men--instead of errorless, cybernetics machines. But they forgot that an errorless man is a dead man..."
Related: Fiction from old "pulps".

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Henry Kuttner's "Happy Ending" (short story, humor, free): When a man got what he "desired"!

While most of the story is mundane - at least for someone who's read a lot of Kuttner - it's the ending that made my day. Rely on Kuttner to turn mundane into extraordinary!

Note: I know of at least one more Kuttner story with this ending - cannot recollect the title, it was in one of the "Isaac Asimov Presents Great SF Stories" books. But that was a dark ending; here, it's a funny one.

Story summary.

James Kelvin, a newspaper reporter, met a very wise robot who gave him an interesting gadget with a button. Press the button & you'll be in rapport with a man from far future; you can then tap his far superior brain to achieve "health, fame and fortune"! Only, beware of that dangerous android Tharn from future. But gadget will protect you from him too.

James will have many adventures & narrow escapes from Tharn in days that follow. He will achieve "health, fame and fortune" too & "he lived happily ever after".

Only if life were so simple...

Fact sheet.

First published: Thrilling Wonder Stories, August 1948.
Download full text.
Rating: A.
Related: Stories of Henry Kuttner; Tuesday Classics; fiction from 1940s.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

"Thrilling Wonder Stories", February 1948 (magazine, free): Annotated table of contents

Cover image of the magazine Thrilling Wonder Stories, February 1948 issue. It is a painting by Earle Bergey - illustrating the story The Sleeper is a Rebel by Bryce Walton.Scans of this magazine are available online as a CBR file as part of a larger package.

Table of contents.

  1. [novel] Bryce Walton's "The Sleeper is a Rebel": "Because he is branded a misfit, Deker volunteers for Nirvana - which brings him surcease for aeons - but at each awakening he is again tormented by evil reality!"
  2. [novelet] William Fitzgerald's "The Seven Temporary Moons": "When enemy space-ships ride aloft in menacing arrays, Dr Murfree again calls on the amazing hillbilly genius, Bud Gregory, for help!"
  3. [novelet] Edmond Hamilton's "Transuranic": "Earth's scientists on the moon create a new life form & then must battle to destroy it - or face inhuman elements beyond control".
  4. [ss] Margaret St Clair's "The Dobridust": "This little gadget gave Oona & other folks more than a headache".
  5. [ss] Ray Bradbury's "The Shape of Things": "Peter Horn's child was a small blue pyramid of another dimension!"
  6. [ss] John Barrett's "The Long Way Back": "Carl Reese & Thela Brill dodge the Martian death in their space ship".
Related: Fiction from Thrilling Wonder Stories.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Eric Frank Russell's "Displaced Person" (short story, religion)

This is a Bible-themed story.

Some revolutionaries aren't welcome anywhere. This one's despot has superb propaganda, & hasn't got many enemies because of this.

Fact sheet.

First published: Weird Tales, September 1948.
Rating: B.
Related: Stories of Eric Frank Russell (annotated list).

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

William Tenn's "Brooklyn Project" (short story, butterfly effect, free): Governments can get away with anything in the name of security

Quote from short story titled Brooklyn Project by William TennMain idea satirizes US government around the beginning of cold war with USSR. Apparently, the security excuses got to crazy limits - enough to bug the author, in any case. But theme seems to be so universal; readers everywhere & at all times should find something familiar. And it's an interesting colorful story even without its political overtones.

Story summary.

"Brooklyn Project" is on the lines of "Manhattan Project" - developing a "chronar", a kind of time travel device, in extreme secrecy. It works as a see-saw that moves through time - something you want to send in one time direction, & another nearby counterweight that goes in the other direction for balance. Government thinks it's the ultimate weapon, since you could put one near an enemy target & move it in some time direction to ensure the whole enemy city or country moves through time in a different direction!!!

At the heart of the story is a cocky but unnamed government official, "the acting secretary to the executive assistant on press relations", whose attitude symbolizes that of the government. He is briefing a group of a dozen journalists about an experiment about to be conducted: a recording device will be sent 4 billion years into the past, & a corresponding counterweight will go appropriate distance in future. Two will see-saw, damping half the time-distance every iteration. At each stage, the device will capture vital data about the earlier earth.

Only, the minor differences the visit makes to a few molecules in these distant times begins to have crazy butterfly effects in our time. But only reader will notice that; government official is as arrogant as in the beginning since no one living can notice the difference...

See also.

  1. Ray Bradbury's "A Sound of Thunder" (1952): Very similar plot idea - minor past modification by time travelers changes now noticeably. This Bradbury story is probably far more widely read then Tenn's; but to me at least, it reads like an amateur piece (yes, I know saying this is sacrilege to some) compared to Tenn's classic. Also, Tenn's came first.

    Note: Use of the phrase "butterfly effect" to designate unexpected associations in chaotic phenomena apparently has a linkage to this Bradbury story.
  2. A E van Vogt's "Seesaw" (1941): The idea of a sort of see-saw in time travel - two counter-masses traveling simultaneous in opposite time-directions - is also found in this earlier story of Van Vogt.

    Tenn is a professed fan of Van Vogt - so idea might have been consciously borrowed.

    This Van Vogt story, incidentally, is the first of a series of variations on the same idea that probably includes a novel too. Best known titles of the series are a short story (+ novel pair?) called "The Weapon Shop" aka "The Weapon Shops of Isher". In my book, "Seesaw" is a more interesting story, even if less well known. Possibly because I've little taste for feudal societies, something the "The Weapon Shop" features but the original doesn't.

Collected in.

  1. Isaac Asimov & Martin H Greenberg (Eds)' "Isaac Asimov Presents the Great SF Stories 10 (1948)" (anthology).

Fact sheet.

First published: Planet Stories, Fall 1948.
Rating: A.
Download full text from Mindless Blather (later needs scrolling down; story begins about half way down the page).
Related: Stories of William Tenn; time travel fiction.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Henry Kuttner's "Don't Look Now" (short story, satire, paranoia, free): Earth, including humans, are property of Martian overlords!

Quote from short story titled Dont Look Now by Henry KuttnerWhile not among the more entertaining stories of Kuttner, it's noteworthy because of influences:

  1. The plot is essentially the same as Eric Frank Russell's novel "Sinister Barrier" (1939) that came out a decade earlier.

    In both, humans are owned by normally invisible overlords - native "spheres" in Russell's version, Martians in Kuttner's. In Kuttner's version, humans are earth natives; in Russell's version, they're equivalent of cattle to their owners & were originally imported from some other world by these "spheres". In both cases, some protagonists accidentally are able to see the overlords. Russell's is a story of resulting revolution, with some hope for humans. In Kuttner's version, revolution is killed even as its seeds are germinating.
  2. Russell's hilarious novel, "Next of Kin" (1958) that came a decade later, has a feature very similar to this story. In Russell's story, a human prisoner of war convinces his alien captors that humans aren't really individuals, but exist in symbiotic pairs - every humans has an associated ghost called "Eustance" that has volition of independent action, will talk & be visible only to its paired human, & will do nasty things to anyone who dares harm the human!

    Kuttner's story has a darker version of it - each human has an associated Martian overlord with its own sinister purpose.
  3. There is an anatomical feature of Martians (when you can see the colors in which they are
    visible): they have a third eye on the forehead that clearly identifies an otherwise human-like camouflage of a Martian. Eye is normally invisible; it can be detected only when it is explicitly opened.

    This "third eye" is a feature of Shiva, one of the most important Hindu gods, & part of the Trinity. According to Indian lore, he opens this third eye only when he's extremely angry, & this opening results in widespread destruction as some kind of magic emanates from that eye. I'm not sure the written Sanskrit versions of the lore specify the location of the eye; I've seen it depicted both on the forehead & at the back of the head.

Story summary.

Lyman, a human, has just discovered the existence of Martian overlords - for some reason, he's now able to see the colors in which they manifest. But he's carefully keeping the knowledge to himself - lest the discovery be noticed by overlords which will guarantee severe punishment. So he keeps obeying the subtle signals Martians use to make humans do things for them.

But he's on the watch, & he seems to have located another human (a newspaper reporter) who probably has also discovered the Martians but is keeping the knowledge to himself. He will confront the newspaperman in a bar with knowledge & plan to publicize the existence of Martians. Turns out the newspaperman has even taken pictures of Martians.

Only the Martians are eternally watchful & are privy to this discourse...

Notes.

  1. Story makes a reference to panic in US in early decades of twentieth century when some radio station broadcast "news" of Martian invasion, based on H G Wells' novel "War of the World".
  2. Bits of the story appear to be satirical references to US society of Kuttner's time. Specifics of them mostly went over my head, though I could get the gist.

Fact sheet.

First published: Startling Stories, March 1948.
Rating: B.
Download MP3 of old radio play based on this story via MindWebs at Internet Archive.
Note: This post is based on the written text of the story. MP3 link is courtesy of Free SF Reader.
Related: Stories of Henry Kuttner.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Murray Leinster's "The Strange Case of John Kingman" (short story, first contact)

Quote from short story titled The Strange Case of John Kingman by Murray LeinsterThis is an unusual & amusing first contact story: no space ships, no space travel, not even any obvious aliens. And yet...

Note it's not available online.

Story summary.

Meadeville Mental Hospital is the oldest mental asylum in the US, "founded some years before the Republic of the United States of America." Young Dr Braden here has discovered some anomalies in the records of a may be 50 year old inmate named John Kingman: no information on his age, relatives, even date of admission. And he has 6 fingers on both hands - all perfectly developed. "understands English very slightly if at all. Does not speak."

Further investigations begin revealing incredible information: he was admitted here on "21st of May, 1786", a full 162 years ago!! He is said to be suffering from "delusions of grandeur", behaves regally around everyone else, & keeps making funny pictures & throwing them at those around him.

Admitted 162 years ago & looking like 50! That makes Dr Braden order detailed tests. What he finds is two hearts, more ribs & vertebrae than normal, normal body temperature of 105F, ... In fact, a very different internal design, though he seems to have lived well off on normal food & looks like a normal human.

The sketches he keeps handing out turn out to be designs of an X-ray machine a doctor can carry around in his pocket, an atomic power plant that uses silicon for fuel, a bomb that will blow up its makers, ... And even in his insane state, he has an IQ that can make the smartest men look ordinary.

More investigations, & we learn that the newspapers around the time of his admission carried unusual sightings of shooting stars a day before he was found. And unusual circumstances in which he was admitted... A conclusion that he's an alien, was insane at the time he ran away to earth, successfully dodged his pursuers, etc. Washington gets involved in the case.

To learn the marvelous knowledge hiding in his head, he must be cured of his illness. But playing with an intelligence that makes human geniuses look ordinary even in its insane state is not exactly a rational call! Not exactly a happy ending - from human point of view.

Collected in.

  1. "The Best of Murray Leinster" (will post ToC later).

Fact sheet.

First published: Astounding Science Fiction, May 1948.
Rating: A
Related: All stories of Murray Leinster.

Monday, June 9, 2008

Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" (short story, non-genre, free): A lottery nobody wants to win!

A couple of weeks ago, John at SF Signal quoted a press release of something presided over by Ellen Datlow that described this story as "one of the most famous short stories in the English language". Since I'd never heard the name of either the author or the story, I assumed it must be a US thing. Fortunately, finding it was very easy - there are a lot of copies on the web.

While the story itself is indeed US-centric, it's fundamentally a human story; you should be able to see the familiar in it wherever you live.

Story summary.

Much of the story is description of a ceremonial gathering in a village. Peculiarities & behavior of this kid, that woman, that man - mostly familiar characters behaving in familiar ways in community settings.

Ceremony itself is an annual ritual. A lottery is drawn where all village residents participate.

"Winner" gets a beating from everyone! This winner's treatment sounded like a more violent version of the "bums"-method of wishing happy-birthday that was popular among men in some colleges in Bombay may be a decade back. But the winning & bizarre ending is only a tiny part of the story.

Fact sheet.

First published: The New Yorker, 28 June 1948.
Rating: A
Download full text.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Ray Bradbury's "June 2001: - And the Moon be Still as Bright" (novelette, science fiction): Some colonists are feeling guilty

Quote from short story titled June 2001- And the Moon be Still as Bright by Ray BradburyThis is the first story in "The Martian Chronicles" where there are rather explicit hints that the book is not really an ordinary science fantasy; it's alternate history - of European colonization of Americas. "Humans" in the book stand for "European colonists"; "Martians" stand for native Americans.

That could be the reason this book is so well known in some countries, & completely unknown elsewhere. I'm currently may be half way through the book, & while there are many interesting stories, I haven't yet seen anything truly outstanding - something that justifies tagging this book as classic. This book is probably considered a classic because of this alternate history view.

And I might have been slow to get hints; someone familiar with history of Americas would probably have caught this alternate history thread much earlier.

Title comes from a poem by Lord Byron:
"So we'll go no more a-roving
So late into the night,
Though the heart be still as loving,
And the moon be still as bright."

Story summary.

In spite of loss of 3 earlier expeditions to Mars without any distress signal, a fourth one has landed - and a much bigger one than original, with 20 crew.

This will be the first successful landing - because Martians are now all dead! That's right - between third expedition in April 2000, & this fourth a year later in June 2001, all the Martians have died! In fact, they all seem to have died during "ten days at the outside" preceding this fourth expedition's arrival. And they've died a horrible death because of "Chicken pox" humans brought with them during earlier expeditions! A quick examination of local cities around the landing site indicates that 80% of these cities have been in ruins for thousands of years, but the remaining 20% have died recently - of human inflicted Chicken pox: "Four out of five have been empty for thousands of years. What happened to the original inhabitants I haven't the faintest idea. But the fifth city always contained the same thing. Bodies. Thousands of bodies." "Chances are a few of the Martians ... escaped to the mountains. But there aren't enough ... to be a native problem."

This discovery of recent human-inflicted wiping out of an old civilization that was once great has deeply affected Jeff Spender, a member of the crew & an archaeologist. Captain Wilder, leader of the expedition, is also feeling a sense of guilt - though his case is much less severe.

But most other crew members are jubilant after having found a whole world to exploit. After a succession of events, Jeff feels utterly disgusted with this group. Their defiling of the place is blasphemy to him. He quietly walks out, & won't be heard of for a week.

When he finally returns, he would already have killed a member of the crew, kill 5 more during the raid, & go away. Most of the remaining story is his hunt by crew where more crew members will die, & finally Jeff gets killed at the hands of Captain when he had opportunity to escape. It's during this hunt that where we slowly learn the way the entire experience has affected him.

Jeff's idea was to kill off entire expedition - except Captain who holds similar views - hoping earth would decide Mars wasn't worth going to. "If I'm lucky, I'll live to be sixty years old. Every expedition that lands on Mars will be met by me. There won't be more than one ship at a time coming up, one every year or so, & never more than twenty men in the crew. After I've made friends with them & explained that our rocket exploded one day - I intend to blow it up after I finish my job this week - I'll kill them off, every one of them. Mars will be untouched for the next half century. After a while, perhaps the Earth people will give up trying."

Before dying, Jeff would have extracted a promise from Captain that he would manage the communications with earth in ways that delay further human arrivals on Mars for as long as possible.

Quotes.

  1. "We won't ruin Mars... It's too big and & good."

    "You think not? We Earth Men have a talent for ruining big, beautiful things. The only reason we didn't set up hot-dog stands in the midst of the Egyptian temple of Karnak is because it was out of the way & served no large commercial purpose."
  2. "We'll call the canal the Rockefeller Canal & the mountain King George Mountain & the sea the Dupont sea, & there'll be Roosevelt & Lincoln & Coolidge cities & it won't ever be right, when there are the proper names for these places."
  3. "How would you feel if you were a Martian & people came to your land & started tearing it up?"
  4. "When I was a kid my folks took me to visit Mexico City. I'll always remember the way my father acted - loud & big. And my mother didn't like the people because they were dark & didn't wash enough. And my sister wouldn't talk to most of them. I was the only one who really liked it. And I can see my mother & father coming to Mars & acting the same way here."
  5. "Do you remember what happened to Mexico when Cortez & his very fine good friends arrived from Spain? A whole civilization destroyed by greedy, righteous bigots."
  6. Martians "knew how to live with nature & get along with nature. They didn't try too hard to be all men & no animal. That's the mistake we made when Darwin showed up. We embraced him & Huxley & Freud... And then we discovered that Darwin & our religions didn't mix. Or at least we didn't think they did... We tried to budge Darwin & Huxley & Freud. They wouldn't move very well. So, like idiots, we tried knocking down religion.

    We succeeded pretty well. We lost our faith & went around wondering what life was for. If art was no more than a frustrated outflinging of desire, if religion was no more than self-delusion, what good was life? Faith had always given us answers to all things. But it all went down the drain with Freud & Darwin. We were & still are a lost people."
  7. "The animal does not question life. It lives. Its very reason for living is life; it enjoys & relishes life. You see - the statuary, the animal symbols, again & again."

    "It looks pagan."

    "On the contrary, those are God symbols, symbols of life.
  8. "I hate this feeling of thinking I'm doing right when I'm not really certain I am. Who are we, anyway? The majority? Is that the answer? The majority is always holy, is it not? ... how the devil did I get caught in this rotten majority? I don't feel comfortable... Can one man be right, while all the world thinks they are right?"

Collected in.

  1. Ray Bradbury's "The Martian Chronicles".

Fact sheet.

First published: Thrilling Wonder Stories, June 1948.
Rating: A
Related: All stories of Ray Bradbury.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Wilmar H Shiras' "In Hiding" (novelette): A young boy who's "different" is forced to conform

Quote from short story titled In Hiding by Wilmar H ShirasWhile a well written story, I've actually read quite a few with similar themes - so impact on me was moderate.

Most interesting thing about this story is suspense. You know something unusual is cooking - but what? Reading the summary below is guaranteed to spoil some of the fun if you intend to actually read it.

Story summary.

There are 2 main actors - 13 year old boy Timothy Paul, & a psychiatrist Dr Peter Welles. Tim has always been a prodigy - mature beyond his years, & that has always got him in trouble. So he now conforms - consciously cuts down his visible performance to level of his peers. What he does behind the scenes - in his spare time - is another matter, as we will slowly learn.

Tim's school teacher, Miss Page, senses something unusual about him - just a hunch, though she cannot really pinpoint. She makes him see Dr Welles. Story is mostly about Dr Welles slowly gaining Tim's confidence, learning about his unusual ability, & discovering that humanity has actually split into two - genetic mutations in children born of a certain nuclear accident are probably supermen (how come it's the same mutation in many babies?).

We see a very common plot device - caring guardians that don't understand the unusual abilities of children, & nip the buds before they can bloom.
  1. In this story, it's Tim's maternal grandmother, Mrs Davis; he was raised by his grandparents - his parents fell victim to accident that gave him unusual abilities. Fearful of his possible mutation, she is especially keen to see him fit.
  2. Last year's beautiful movie - "Tare Zameen Par" (2007) - has a dyslexic child with a loving but utterly unsympathetic dad; he will also be helped by his teacher.
  3. This is also the main theme Henry Kuttner's very dark "Absalom" - there too a mutation is sweeping through the population, turning new generation much smarter than older one. A loving father who's unconsciously jealous of his son's unusual abilities is coming in the way.
  4. Judith Merril's "That Only a Mother" has a parents' mutation fears similar to Tim's grandma here - but in very unhappy circumstances. There too, mutations are caused as a side-effect of nuclear bomb radiation.
There must be at least a half dozen other stories I've posted on here that have somewhat similar story line.

Collected in.

  1. Ben Bova (Ed)'s "The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume Two B".

Fact sheet.

First published: Astounding Science Fiction, November 1948.
Rating: A
Note the author is a woman, in spite of the name!

Saturday, May 3, 2008

** Ray Bradbury's "August 1999: The Earth Men" (short story, humor, prelim post)

Second human expedition has arrived on Mars. They will get a strange (& humorous - for reader) welcome, but meet a terrible end because Martians are so confused.

Collected in.

  1. Ray Bradbury's "The Martian Chronicles".

Fact sheet.

First published: Thrilling Wonder Stories, August, 1948.
Rating: B
Related: All stories of Ray Bradbury.

Note: Why is this post so short?

** Judith Merril's "That Only a Mother" (short story, science fiction)

Moving story of a post nuclear apocalypse where normal child births are very rare; nearly all children born are grossly deformed. Story tracks a woman's pregnancy, birth of a daughter, & first few years (or months?) of the daughter. Mother so badly wants her child to be normal that she hasn't even noticed that her daughter lacks all limbs - even several years after birth!!

See also.

  1. Wilmar H Shiras' "In Hiding": Another story that features a very fearful maternal grandmother. Her daughter & son-in-law died in the after effects of nuclear accident, & their surviving baby is might be a mutant.

Collected in.

  1. Robert Silverberg (Ed)'s "The Science Fiction Hall of Fame: Volume One, 1929-1964".

Fact sheet.

First published: Astounding, June 1948.
Rating: A

Note: Why is this post so short?

Thursday, May 1, 2008

** Eric Frank Russell's "Late Night Final" (short story, science fiction)

A variant of "... And Then There Were None", but with a very different ending.

Collected in.

  1. "Major Ingredients" (ed Rick Katze).  
  2. John W Campbell, Jr (ed)'s "The Astounding Science Fiction Anthology".

Fact sheet.

First published: Astounding, December 1948.
Rating: A
Related: All stories of Eric Frank Russell.
Listed among the stories from John Campbell's Astounding/Analog.

Note: Why is this post so short?

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

A E van Vogt's "The Monster" aka "Resurrection" (short story, alien colonists): Nasty aliens attempting colonization of a dead earth get a rude shock

Quote from short story titled The Monster aka Resurrection by A E van VogtIn a sense, this one falls in the same class as Clarke's "Rescue Party" or "The Songs of Distant Earth": an extremely positive doomsday story. It's even humorous - occasionally. I found it less interesting than Clarke's stories, but it was enjoyable enough.

Story summary.

Long in future, with far more technologically advanced humans, one fine day all animal life on earth dies. But not plant life. Even insects are gone (How do plants pollinate? Only with wind?). We're not told the fate of sea creatures; presumably, they too are gone. Cause was a "A nucleonic storm. It swept in from outer space. It brushed this edge of our galaxy. It was about ninety light-years in diameter, beyond the farthest limits of our power. There was no escape from it. We had dispensed with spaceships, and had no time to construct any. Castor, the only star with planets ever discovered by us, was also in the path of the storm."

An unspecified thousands of years later, aliens called Ganae (from planet Gana) land on earth. These are very violent & ruthless creatures - they've been killing whole planets of life by bombarding with "poisonous radiation" so they can overtake those worlds. Earth is perfectly habitable for them.

And the visitors are suspecting it's their kind that has been behind earthlife's demise - but aren't sure. Since all animal life is dead, they want to find out the cause of mass deaths before proceeding with their own colonization of it.

Now, they have this magical machine. It can revive the dead given the dead body - perfect with the memories till the demise! And in only a few minutes! "The science involved was simple and always fully effective." Plus a perfect language translator - so they can talk to the newly revived.

OK - they figure the bipeds were probably the dominant life form. So they begin reviving some - preserved in a museum, or just lying around in the open (end was apparently sudden, but known) - from various periods of human history. First 3 such revived are quickly killed, though the third nearly killed the aliens instead. Second was from our current times. Third some 2000 years after our time; apart from a lot of technology, telepathy was common in this era.

It's the forth revival - from a human far into future & far more technically competent than us - that the things really get interesting. I found it odd the aliens were so dumb as to try revival of one from a time later than third - who was their match enough! Third revival happened on the fifth day of their arrival; fourth on eighth day. Title comes from aliens' view of the forth; or may be the reader's view of aliens.

The moment he is revived, he seized the situation (presumably telepathically) & vanished. ! You see, by his time, teleporting was common! And not restricted to small distances either. They could do it up to a few tens of light years!!

While the aliens are looking around, he soon reappears. Looking very calm. He doesn't have much sympathy for aliens since he knows their nature, but is thankful for reviving him.

But aliens are many, are armed, & are arrogant. When all attempts to harm him come to naught - including ray guns & atomic weapons dropped after they take off (they failed to detonate), they come back for truce. But are still way too arrogant. And challenge him to stop them. Our hero is calmness personified.

In the meantime, after the first debacle, aliens had destroyed all their revival-of-dead machines - lest this superman gain access to one.

Aliens head back home - to get more help. Part way through, they notice the human is in the ship! Yes - he teleported. They cannot even contact their home word, lest human track the message beam & teleport there.

So they decide to commit mass suicide. At least human hasn't learned the technology for reviving the dead, or location of their world. Just before their death, they will learn this is exactly what he had done when he teleported immediately on revival. Humans are going to be around again...

Fact sheet.

First published: Astounding Science Fiction, August 1948.
Rating: A
Listed in Contento's Top Ten Most Reprinted Stories.
Listed among the stories from John Cambell's Astounding/Analog.
Related: Stories of A E van Vogt.