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Who Needs Enemies? [Mass Market Paperback]

Alan Dean Foster (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 12, 1984
'Trusted Seller;, 'very good condition

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Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 257 pages
  • Publisher: Del Rey (May 12, 1984)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345316576
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345316578
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #886,153 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Continuation of WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE..., June 25, 2002
By 
Michele L. Worley (Kingdom of the Mouse, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Who Needs Enemies? (Mass Market Paperback)
Of the 12 short stories herein, only 1 is a Pip & Flinx story, although others share the Humanx Commonwealth universe. Foster provides a short introduction for each, discussing the story's genesis, as well as an introduction for the entire book. The cover art for this edition is from "Wu-Ling's Folly" - not Pip, in other words.

"Swamp Planet Christmas" (1976) A series of e-mail messages, mostly between a little girl writing to Santa Claus and a government computer across the galaxy, this snafu tale is intended to be in the style of Eric Frank Russell (one of Foster's idols; I recommend his NEXT OF KIN).

"Snake Eyes" (1978) - The only Pip & Flinx story in this volume, set between THE END OF THE MATTER and FLINX IN FLUX.

"Bystander" (1978) Chapman was dispatched as sole crew on the rescue ship sent to evacuate the Abraxis colony to escape its flare-prone star. He's just a backup to the tertiary backups, so when the ship awakens him early, he is himself in mortal peril. As if the upcoming freak flare weren't enough, a mysterious Dhabian spacecraft is pacing his ship - those aliens who ordinarily refuse to have anything to do with humanity.

"What Do the Simple Folk Do?" (1979) Picture a future in which "plot it yourself" stories are mixed with first-class medical technology, where network execs argue that viewers expect realism to include *real* damage - after all, what are actors being paid for? No joke when one's ratings slip...

"Gift of a Useless Man" (1979) Lilliputian overtones here. When Peterson, fleeing for his life, crashed on the tiny planetoid, he was left paralyzed as well as hopelessly stranded. But when a tiny, telepathic alien befriends him, he becomes far more valuable than he ever was in his old life...

"Surfeit" (1982) A Humanx Commonwealth story, although not involving Pip and Flinx, but rather the Monsters of Dis - the dream of surfers across the galaxy.

"The Dark Light Girl" (1981) Haskell Wells decided to take the back country roads from L.A. to Dallas, seeing the untouched part of the country while changing jobs to another newspaper. Now he's seeing more of it than he bargained for, stranded for a day in Agua Caliente, New Mexico by a torn-up tire until the mechanic can get another from the next town...

"Instant with Loud Voices" (1982) Twenty years of hard work - continual design improvements integrated into the growing system - have gone into making DISRA the biggest and best computer in the world, and for 6 years it's been able to solve problems from earthquake to crop failure. The world depends on it - but it has weaknesses that no simpler system can have, and its creator is preparing to ask a dangerous question...

"Communication" (1981) Earth is about to have its first contact with aliens, wish to deal a single world leader, based on their analysis of Earth's communication broadcasts, who seems more popular and durable than any other. Who will it turn out to be?

"The Last Run" (1982) Bill "the Wisp" Switch is a genius at souping up engines, and gets a kick out of street racing (where a mere 150 mph isn't worth the gasoline it costs). But after Wisp defeated a Lambourgini and a Ferrari one night, a new challenger offered him the chance of a lifetime.

"Wu-Ling's Folly" (1982) The old West's gold was bound to attract a dragon or two - hard luck on the Butterfield stagecoach line, in a world that doesn't believe in dragons. Fortunately, "Mad Amos" Malone makes a living solving unusual problems. (See Foster's short story collection MAD AMOS for more of the character.)

"Village of the Chosen" (1983) Harvey Vickers has spent 20 years in Africa for UPI, and while he's been in worse places than Mogadishu, recording the endless cycle of devastation has burned him out. Until he collides with a woman in the street - knocking her veil off to reveal a face as exquisite as an emerald, and about the same color...
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars SF & fantasy, April 7, 2009
This review is from: Who Needs Enemies? (Mass Market Paperback)
In a career spanning almost 40 years (his first try at a novel, "The Tar-Aiym Krang," was published in 1972), Foster has turned out nearly 80 original volumes, not counting his film novelizations and tie-ins. As he says in his Introduction, why should a working writer (especially one who could probably sell his laundry list if he wanted to) bother with short stories? His answer: short fiction provides a kind of satisfaction no other format can--and probably just as surely to the reader as to the writer.

Here are a dozen stories (one fantasy, the rest sf), all previously published (though the Acknowledgments don't always specify where), of which I personally enjoyed six or seven, a reasonable return for my money. The high points of the collection are "Snake Eyes," a new novella (novelette?) of Foster's best-known characters, Flinx and his mighty minidrag Pip, in which the pair become allied with a prospector and run afoul of claim-jumpers (you might call it a Western with a science-fictional setting), and "Wu-Ling's Folly," in which a live dragon begins to terrorize the 19th-C. Colorado countryside--until someone thinks to call in "Mad Amos" Malone (definitely a Western, but with a fantasy twist). Though perhaps not as good as the pieces he assembled in the companion volume, With Friends Like These..., all the stories are solid writing and will appeal to his legion of fans.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Who needs Enemies..., May 16, 2000
This review is from: Who Needs Enemies? (Mass Market Paperback)
This is a collection of short stories with just one of them being the one with Pip and Flinx which is why I bought the book in the first place, but all the stories were greatly enjoyable. I would reccomend this for light reading for anyone.
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