From Publishers Weekly
The illuminating second volume of collected short stories by one of the field's masters makes time travel easy for SF readers. In the late '50s, as genre markets dried up, Silverberg nearly abandoned SF until he won the support of legendary writer/editor Frederick Pohl of Galaxy magazine. The stories written for Pohl mark Silverberg's journeyman years, when his vision stretched to match his growing skills as a writer. Pieces including "To See the Invisible Man," "The Pain Peddlers," "The Sixth Palace," "Flies" and the title story raise knife-edged questions about human kindness and human cruelty. "Ishmael in Love," "Passengers" and "Bride 91" are preoccupied with interspecies sex (to the old-fashioned Pohl's consternation). "Hawksbill Station," "A Happy Day in 2381" and "Sundance" explore extreme settings and points of view. Older SF readers will relish these 21 stories, Silverberg's first notable work, while younger readers may finally learn what all the completely justifiable fuss was about. (June)
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Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
The second volume collecting Silverberg's short fiction deletes the years from 1958, when the leading distributor of pulp magazines collapsed, bringing the market for short sf down with it, to 1962, when that market modestly reopened. Silverberg responded with such classics as the title story, "Hawksbill Station," "A Happy Day in 2381," and "To See the Invisible Man." Silverberg is more familiar with postwar sf than practically anybody else, and this series incorporating his comments on the contents offers lots of information as well as good reading. Roland Green
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
