Little Gryphon

 

City


Open Road Media
Fiction, Collecton/Sci-Fi
Themes: Aliens, Alternate Earths, Anthropomorphism, Canids, Classics, Robots, Space Stories
***+

Description

For thousands of years, around the fires at night, tales have been told of ancient times and lost worlds... but were they ever true? These stories are often considered cautionary tales or attempts by previous generations to give form to impossible concepts, but some argue that there is a factual basis, a hidden history wrapped in layers of storytelling, pointing to a lost, utterly alien species. Was there ever a time when Dogs had no speech, when they were just dumb beasts at the heels of the legendary, ultimately self-destructive race known as Man?

Review

This classic collection by noted author Clifford D. Simak chronicles the rise of a Doggish race in the wake of humanity's failure, a fall triggered not by war or external catastrophe but by blind spots and flaws in our racial psyche. It's an odd conceit, one that takes a while to grow on the reader, especially as the pre-tale commentary (by Doggish authors, many of whom argue against the possibility of Man ever having existed outside a story) acts as partial spoilers for the tale that follows. (This especially wasn't helped by a long-winded introduction to this Kindle reprint, one that assumes I already know about Simak and the significance of City.) The stories themselves also show their age around the edges, and not just by having the last cities of modern civilization abandoned as obsolete a few decades before I read this: the tales all rely on outdated attitudes and cultural assumptions, including (but not limited to) the sexism. Women appear as wives or secretaries, and almost never else - and among the robots, Dogs, and other species, no females apparently exist at all. The tales themselves often wander into philosophical territory, bogging down now and again under the weight of their ideas. That said, the further I read, the more the overall themes started to gel, and the collection as a whole presents ideas and images that linger long after I met them. I can see how these were, and are, considered genre classics, even if the style and some of the tales themselves aren't quite my cup of cocoa.

 

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Way Station


Open Road Media
Fiction, Sci-Fi
Themes: Aliens, Classics, Country Tales, Space Stories, Spiritual Themes
****

Description

For over a hundred years, Civil War veteran Enoch Wallace has lived on a quiet plot of land alone... and neither he nor his old house have aged a single day. Even in the most remote backwoods, such a phenomenon can't help but inspire whispers among neighbors. Now the government is covertly poking around. None of them would understand the truth: Enoch's home was selected as a galactic way station for travelers across the stars. He regularly hosts beings that defy human intellect and imagination. When a neighbor girl discovers his secret, the government's meddling creates an interplanetary diplomatic crisis, and schisms in the galactic command structure threaten his station, Enoch must decide where, and for whom, he ultimately stands.

Review

This classic holds up better than some older science fiction, though it can't help but show some age around the edges. Enoch, as an average man who inadvertently finds himself on the edge of either a major leap forward for the species or a stumble that could take down civilization, and the way station itself remain compelling, with some nice imagery and ideas. It takes some time to get going, meandering about the setup and slowly building to the climactic collision of crises. Without spoilers, I can't get into the parts that truly date it, but I will say that the emphasis on spirituality was a thing that many older science fiction authors seemed insistent on shoehorning in, and it doesn't always age well, especially when it becomes the deus ex machina (almost literally, in this case) that resolves the main problem. Themes could be a trifle heavy-handed, too. Still, it's a decent, if sometimes slow, tale.

 

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