Extollager
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2010
- Messages
- 9,294
Wonder why there doesn't seem to have been a thread on this author and anthologist, also critic who trashed Allen Adler's Terror on Planet Ionus, which I just read. (It was pretty poor.) I'm not necessarily the right person to start one, since I haven't read all that much by him myself. I know I like "Stranger Station" and have read The Futurians, etc. Not impressed by "Not With a Bang." I own at least a couple of his anthologies, the Science Fiction Argosy and A Century of Science Fiction.
There's his story from The Science Fiction Hall of Fame Vol. 1, "The Country of the Kind," with its title punning on Wells's "Country of the Blind."
It’s a futuristic exploration of a theme similar to that which C. S. Lewis (who had a story in the same issue of Fantasy and Science Fiction that "Country" first appeared in) discussed in his 1949 essay “The Humanitarian Theory of Punishment.”
A teenager killed his girlfriend, possibly while having a seizure. Thirty years later, he remains free. But to protect others, (1) they are forbidden to acknowledge his existence in any way; (2) he has been conditioned so that he has a seizure any time he seriously contemplates hurting someone; (3) he has been doctored such that he emits a revolting odor, warning people to keep away. Thus, though he can commit acts of vandalism with impunity – in this future world, rebuilding is perhaps a welcome diversion – he is terribly alone, constantly frustrated in his wish to have anyone join him.
There's his story from The Science Fiction Hall of Fame Vol. 1, "The Country of the Kind," with its title punning on Wells's "Country of the Blind."
It’s a futuristic exploration of a theme similar to that which C. S. Lewis (who had a story in the same issue of Fantasy and Science Fiction that "Country" first appeared in) discussed in his 1949 essay “The Humanitarian Theory of Punishment.”
A teenager killed his girlfriend, possibly while having a seizure. Thirty years later, he remains free. But to protect others, (1) they are forbidden to acknowledge his existence in any way; (2) he has been conditioned so that he has a seizure any time he seriously contemplates hurting someone; (3) he has been doctored such that he emits a revolting odor, warning people to keep away. Thus, though he can commit acts of vandalism with impunity – in this future world, rebuilding is perhaps a welcome diversion – he is terribly alone, constantly frustrated in his wish to have anyone join him.
Last edited: