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The Human Zero: The Science Fiction Stories of Erle Stanley Gardner
 
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The Human Zero: The Science Fiction Stories of Erle Stanley Gardner [Hardcover]

Erle Stanley Gardner (Author), Martin Harry Greenberg (Editor), Charles Waugh (Editor)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

1981
Dust jacket notes: "A space capsule reels into space (in the 1920s!), complete with rocket and weightless passengers. Intelligent ants guard a ledge of solid gold in darkest Africa. A scientific miracle makes people invisible. Fans of Erle Stanley Gardner will be surprised and delighted to discover in these long-unavailable stories that he was one of our earliest science fiction writers - and science fiction readers will regret that he did not write many more. Published in Argosy magazine in the 1920s and 1930s, these suspenseful tales display Gardner's grasp of a vast range of unlikely subject matter and the masterful gift for plot and action that made him the best-selling author of all time. Some of the stories are peopled with his classic cops and killers, tough reporters and sleuths of detective fiction, along with the mad professors and strange geniuses of fantastic science. The nature of molecules is the key to a locked-room murder in The Human Zero title story, and A Year in a Day is another crime story. But there is also natural disaster when a shift in the earth's poles causes a worldwide flood (with a gripping description of the inundation of New York City), and still more eerie events are tied to hypnotism, reincarnation, and exotic ceremonies in a lost temple in India. The author's imagination and ingenuity seem limitless; the action and entertainment he could pack into a 10,000-word story are remarkable. The Human Zero: The Science Fiction Stories of Erle Stanley Gardner is a find for all his fans and collectors of his work."

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 444 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow; 1st edition (1981)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 068800122X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0688001223
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.9 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,639,331 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Dogfights, Deluges, and Interplanetary Skulduggary, May 22, 2006
By 
Paul Camp (Chattanooga, TN United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Human Zero: The Science Fiction Stories of Erle Stanley Gardner (Hardcover)
Here is a collection of seven science fiction novellas by Erle Stanley Gardner, published in _Argosy_ between 1928 and 1932. Two of the stories,"Monkey's Eyes," and "The Sky's the Limit," were two-part serials in 1929. The first published story was "Rain Magic," while the last was "New Worlds." When the last story was published, the first two Perry Mason novels appeared. Thereafter, Gardner devoted most of his energy to writing mystery novels.

Two stories in the collection, "The Human Zero" and "New Worlds," were reprinted in _Fantastic_ in 1962 (in the January and September issues, respectively) with critical introductions by Sam Moskowitz. It was there that I read these tales for the first time.
All of the stories are fairly standard action oriented pulp stories, with many of the stock plots and stereotyped characters of the day. But they contain a fair amount of snappy dialogue. And the action sequences are crisp and clear:

But Phil had superior speed. He jerked the throttle open, zoomed, banked, twisted, seemed to be sideslipping into the jagged tops of moonlit trees, swung, scudded along over the tree tops like a frightened fowl, then zoomed again.
Murasingh was outmaneuvered, left behind by the superior power and speed of the faster plane. The machine gun spat a spiteful farewell... (92)

From where they stood they could see the older towers of the lofty buildings of the downtown section, and they were falling like trees before a giant gale. Here and there were buildings cocked over at a dangerous angle, yet apparently motionless. But even as they looked, their eyes beheld two buidings toppling over simultaneously. (154)

I'd heard they never struck at a man while he was strugglin'. Maybe it's true. I kept movin', hands and feet goin'. The raft was only an inch or two outa water, an' it was narrow. The sharks cut through the water like hissin' shadows. (218)

The street was frozen into arrested activity... A horse was trotting, and but one foot was on the ground. On his back was a mounted policeman. He had evidently been swinging his club. Now he was like a mounted statue. A taxicab was cutting over on the turn, and the tires on the outside were flattened by the weight of the car. There was not the slightest motion in either wheels or tires. (308)

Before his question could be answered an arched tip appeared over the western circle of the earth, grew in size and became a flaming ball of fire. Yet around it was no glow of blue heaven. There was a ribbon of radiance, then black sky. And the ball of fire speedily welled to white, eye-blistering heat.
The sun was rising in the west! (405)

My favorite story, by a wide margin, is "New Worlds" -- a disaster story involving the flooding of New York and the collapse of civilization. As Sam Moskowitz pointed out in his introduction to the story, part of its appeal is the fantasy it conveys of throwing off the shackles of civilization in favor of complete freedom and a life of rugged individualism.

Passable pieces are "The Human Zero" and "A Year in a Day," two locked room mysteries with science fictional solutions; "Monkey's Eyes," an account of Dirty Doings in India; and "The Sky's the Limit," a nonstop action adventure that takes the hero to Venus by an antigravity bell. Much more minor pieces are "Rain Magic" and "The Man with Pin-Point Eyes."

All of the stories in this collection may be considered journeyman work by Gardner. But it is possible to see in these stories qualities that he would display in his later writing.

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