Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Weekly Short Stories: 1975 Science Fiction, Part 4

Below are my reactions to the final four stories appearing in the book Donald A. Wollheim Presents The 1976 Annual World's Best SF, displaying the editor's selection of 1975's finest science fiction.  In less than a three week span of September, 1975 there were two separate attempts on President Gerald Ford's life, September 5th by Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme in Sacramento and Sara Jane Moore on the 22nd in San Francisco.  Neither was able to hit their target...yet it was only a gun loading mistake by Fromme and a heroic bystander stopping Moore that prevented yet another tragic assassination...a scary time in our history.  And now here are my reviews for those four sci-fi tales...

CHILD OF ALL AGES by P.J. Plauger
This story strongly reminds me of the old Twilight Zone episode Long Live Walter Jameson.  In each, the protagonist is an individual who has achieved immortality and lived through much of our history.  In Plauger's version it's a "14" year-old girl who just got in trouble for arguing with her history teacher about the Industrial Revolution in England...and she knows about it firsthand.  But Melissa knows she cannot reveal the truth, not even to her loving adoptive parents: she is 2,400 years old and soon realizes that it is time to move on...

HELBENT 4 by Stephen Robinett
A space war machine, Helbent 4, who which happens to be the first"person" narrator, has been sent from Earth with its fleet to battle and destroy the alien enemy (our hero calls them "Spacethings") amassing many light-years distant. After the victorious battle that lasts a tiny fraction of a second, Helbent 4 discovers itself to be the only "survivor" of the machine-run war and returns to Earth to receive further instructions...only this is a different Earth, one that sees this marvel of technology as the enemy.  I loved the colorful language of Helbent 4, a tragic figure in the end...

THE PROTOCALS OF THE ELDERS OF BRITAIN by John Brunner
A team of four experts working for a computer company with an exclusive contract with the government gets sent far below to try and debug one of their products.  It seems that the highly secretive officials cannot access their messages due to some sort of programming error.  Desmond Williams manages to get the communications decoded, and what he discovers is very enlightening...or disillusioning, depending on one's point of view.  From 2021's persepective, I didn't see anything particularly surprising, sad to say... 

THE CUSTODIANS by Richard Cowper
This is a tale about mysterious locations on Earth that allow someone there to see into the future, and how a tradition of prophecies passed from one "custodian" to the next within a remote German monastery.  The current custodian of the secret room knows what's coming, but withholds believing completely...until his successor arrives and fulfills another prophecy.  I thought this would be a great Twilight Zone episode...

Next week I begin my look at the year 1976 in the realm of short science fiction...

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