Reading Around in Old SF Magazines

It looks like there were only three issues of this magazine in 1960, according to the Internet Science Fiction Database. Which one do you have?

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Regarding "The Original Science Fiction Stories":

You have a couple of very interesting, offbeat authors there, Lafferty and Emshwiller.

Bill Wesley just seems to have had a small handful of stories published from 1954 to 1960, according to ISFDB.

"Once in a Blue Moon" is a reprint from 1942, it seems.

Knight seems to have been active only from 1937 to 1942, until he came back in the middle of the 1960's to collaborate with James Blish on a few stories that got fixed up into the novel A Torrent of Faces.
 
April 1969

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A new serial starts: The Five Way Secret Agent by Mack Reynolds. The detective from Extortion Inc (February issue) is hired by a major corporation to link up with co-conspirators in the Soviet Union to launch the new world order. However other groups have different ideas, and make their viewpoint known ... one way or another (see the cover).

The short novel is Opportunist by Guy McCord. Follow up story to Krishna (January). Fearing cultural destruction, many of the Caledonians rebel against the invaders (at least, those Caledonians that have not partaken of the krishna drug). A select team captures a leader of the invaders and plans a counter-strike against the capital city.

The novelette is Cultural Interference by Walter L. Kleine. Surveillance Patrol is kept busy trying to keep teenage saucer pilots from buzzing the primitive sentient species known as humans. However, one alien couple crashes on the planet, and the cause of the crash causes excitement in both Moscow and Washington ... and in Patrol HQ.

Finally, the short story is Hey But No Presto by Jack Wodhams. A shady resort operator manages to divert jump gate travelers to his high-class, and expensive, resort. And once their money runs out, they get to wash the dishes...


The Science Fact is part two on the article on pulsars. Interesting photo from the construction of the Arecibo radio dish, which was recently allowed to collapse rather than repair it. Seems a waste.


Issue Notes

Mack Reynolds has two stories in this issue, writing the second as Guy McCord...The results from the Analytical Library have caught up to 1969. First place by a clear margin is Wolfling (1.59) followed by Krishna (2.36)...Miller reviews Rite of Passage by Alexi Panshin, another story that has featured in a number of collections over the years. However the review made me realize that this story is actually a full novel, and Mia's time during her rite of passage is only part of the book...A. Bertram Chandler in Brass Tacks relates how a conversation he had with Campbell years ago helped him recently fix his ship's radar. Apparently, the radar wave guide was plumber's work, according to Campbell. Chandler sent for one, much to the amazement of his officers, and, voilà, the plumber got it fixed.
 
May 1969


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The serial The Five Way Secret Agent by Mack Reynolds continues with the second and final installment. Agent Rex Bader travels behind the Iron Curtain to meet up with his employer´s contacts, a trip that is also of keen interest to four other shadowy organizations. Not only must he strike a careful balance in what he reveals to each group, he also realizes that not everyone is who they appear to be.

This issue's novelettes are:

Dragon's Teeth by M.R. Anver. Terra and the alien Cadosians have been involved in a long and costly war. A peace conference has been called to end the conflict. However a militant movement within the Cadosian government plans to sabotage the conference. Can Terran security uncover the plot in time?

Persistence by Joseph P. Martino. Space Patrol has captured an enemy Arcani cruiser. Learning it's secrets could turn the tide of the war, especially if they can discover a suspected hyper-light speed communication system.

The first short story is Operation M.I. by R. Hamblen. The volunteers testing a one-person warp ship are not dealing well with the isolation that the trip requires. Psychology Division gets involved and comes up with a special type of AI to help the pilot.

The second short story is Initial Contact by Perry A. Chapdelaine. Earth has established rudimentary communication with an alien species on Epsilon Eridani using 'fast time' radio transmissions. Now the Eridanians are sending a space ship to Earth, and the media is reporting that 'aliens are invading Earth with the intention of enslaving all humans'.



Comment on the story Persistence. Interesting in that it takes Space Patrol experts weeks and weeks to begin to figure out the alien power and communication systems. Quite unlike a lot of popular TV SF where the expert sits down at an alien console and within five minutes has it all figured out ... like Carter and Jackson from the TV series Stargate.


Science Fact is on the chemistry of a coral reef.

Issue Notes

The Analytical Library rates February's stores. In first place is Wolfling (1.59) followed by A Womanly Talent (2.06)... Miller discusses indexes and bibliographies in The Reference Library, and reviews The Index of Science Fiction Magazines: 1951-1965 as well as the Australian Science Fiction Index: 1925-1967. He also reviews the novel Planet of the Apes.
 
June 1969


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The first novelette is Artifact by J.B. Clarke. A Terran Federation spaceship has found an alien artifact in Mars orbit. Returned to Earth, the device is carefully studied by scientists, while the politicians debate its purpose. A stray object lost in space for millennia to be finally captured by the sun's gravity? Or something else, perhaps more sinister?

The second novelette is The Nitrocellulose Doormat by Christopher Anvil. Terran infantry forces are bogged down on the alien planet Terex, in a futile attempt to help the local government fight against rebel forces. With their hands tied by local customs, and their supplies being sabotaged or stolen, Space Force command calls for help.

The short novel is Dramatic Mission by Anne McCaffrey. Helva is a ship's "brain", a surgically-modified human placed in a titanium shell to control a spaceship, assisted by a "brawn", another human who does the physical work on-board. Helva is assigned to transport a Shakespearean troupe to the Beta Corvi system, where strange aliens were recently contacted. The aliens have proposed an unusual trade. All the troupe has to do is perform a play, Romeo & Juliet, and the aliens will give to the Central Worlds highly advanced energy technology. Apparently, a simple trade...


This issue also has three short stories:

Zozzl by Jackson Burrows. To protect itself, a zozzl can read the memories and thoughts of those that hunt it, then use them to create nightmares and drive their hunters mad. But spaceman Hammer is determined to capture one, in spite of the danger.

The Ghoul Squad by Harry Harrison. In the near future, technology for organ transplants, their demand, and policy changes have combined to create the Isoplastic Transplantation Bank. This service processes the recently deceased for their organs. Not everyone agrees.

Jackal's Meal by Gordon R. Dickson. Tensions are increasing on the frontier between Earth and the Morah confederation of Empires. During discussions between Earth diplomats and one of the Morah emperors at an Earth outpost, a prisoner escapes from the Morah ship. Apparently a human spy captured years ago, and now at the point of dying, Earth grants him sanctuary. This threatens to jump start a war between the two powers.



Issue Notes

Interesting mix with the authors in this issue. We have three established names, a prolific writer for Analog (Chistopher Anvil), and two writers (Clarke and Burrows) that only wrote a handful of stories over several decades.

I see that Dramatic Mission is the fourth story of five about Helva, and these were turned into a novel in 1969, The Ship Who Sang, which in turn launched a number of similar novels. Dramatic Mission was both a Hugo and a Nebula nominee.

The title Jackal's Meal is from a Rudyard Kipling poem, "The Ballad of East and West".

In the March ratings of The Analytical Library, Trap (1.80) edges out Wolfling (2.00) for top honors...Miller in The Reference Library has high praise for Hal Clement's story collection Small Changes, and describes him as an excellent author in the Analog "hard" SF tradition. Hmmm . Maybe I'm going to have to read some of his stories, sounds interesting. As well, Miller compares Keith Laumer's Retief with Poul Anderson's Flandry series, then goes on to review a similar series by Alexei Panshin featuring agent Anthony Villiers. Miller writes that this series is the best of the three.


I've not read any of the Retief or Villiers stories; I have read some of the Flandry stories and found the sexism hard to take. Any comments on any of these?
 
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Six Months Into Analog 1969 - Reflections

In my introduction to my 1969 Analog overviews, I referred to comments that I have read over the years that "Campbell's SF mindset was firmly fixed in the 1940's; that and his obsession with para-psychological phenomena was driving away both writers and readers. In the last days of his editorship, only second-rate writers wrote for Analog, turning out third-rate stories."

I personally can now discount the latter part of that statement. There are some fine writers turning out stories in 1969. Not to say that there isn't the odd story that I personally don't find appealing, but in comparison with certain later years of Analog there is some good stuff being written in these pages.

Now, there are indeed a few stories that involve some aspect or other of para-psychological phenomena; I counted five. Hardly indicative of an obsession.

One could also perhaps include Wolfling, as its transport system can read a person's mind to teleport them to where they are thinking, and in Dramatic Mission the alien Corviki transfer minds to empty host bodies on their world. Not para-psychological per se, but the reading/manipulation of thought is probably getting a little further out there in terms of hard SF.

Were these stories popular? Let's look at The Analytical Library:

February's stories. In first place is Wolfling (1.59) followed by A Womanly Talent (2.06). A Chair of Comparative Leisure finished fourth at 3.68 (perhaps more indicative of its uninteresting plot than anything else).

In the March ratings, Trap (1.80) edges out Wolfling (2.00) for top honors. Minitalent is in third with 2.80.

In the June listings Dramatic Mission was second at 2.67 and Zozzl was fifth at 3.87.

(Oddly enough, the Dickson story Jackal's Meal that I quite liked was fourth at 3.80. Oh well!).

So there does appear to be some appetite in the Analog readership for these types of stories; certainly there was no whole scale rejection by readers of this sub-genre. Nor did I see a single letter in Brass Tacks complaining about them appearing in Analog "the bastion of hard SF".


(Oddly enough, I have a feeling that some of those that are critical of Campbell's interest in para-psychological abilities quite enjoyed Babylon 5 with its PSI Corp....).

As a personal aside, these types of stories aren't my cup of tea either, but there are certainly enough stories that do entertain me that I am quite enjoying Analog 1969...
 
Six Months Into Analog 1969 - Reflections

In my introduction to my 1969 Analog overviews, I referred to comments that I have read over the years that "Campbell's SF mindset was firmly fixed in the 1940's; that and his obsession with para-psychological phenomena was driving away both writers and readers. In the last days of his editorship, only second-rate writers wrote for Analog, turning out third-rate stories."

I personally can now discount the latter part of that statement. There are some fine writers turning out stories in 1969. Not to say that there isn't the odd story that I personally don't find appealing, but in comparison with certain later years of Analog there is some good stuff being written in these pages.

Now, there are indeed a few stories that involve some aspect or other of para-psychological phenomena; I counted five. Hardly indicative of an obsession.

One could also perhaps include Wolfling, as its transport system can read a person's mind to teleport them to where they are thinking, and in Dramatic Mission the alien Corviki transfer minds to empty host bodies on their world. Not para-psychological per se, but the reading/manipulation of thought is probably getting a little further out there in terms of hard SF.

Were these stories popular? Let's look at The Analytical Library:

February's stories. In first place is Wolfling (1.59) followed by A Womanly Talent (2.06). A Chair of Comparative Leisure finished fourth at 3.68 (perhaps more indicative of its uninteresting plot than anything else).

In the March ratings, Trap (1.80) edges out Wolfling (2.00) for top honors. Minitalent is in third with 2.80.

In the June listings Dramatic Mission was second at 2.67 and Zozzl was fifth at 3.87.

(Oddly enough, the Dickson story Jackal's Meal that I quite liked was fourth at 3.80. Oh well!).

So there does appear to be some appetite in the Analog readership for these types of stories; certainly there was no whole scale rejection by readers of this sub-genre. Nor did I see a single letter in Brass Tacks complaining about them appearing in Analog "the bastion of hard SF".


(Oddly enough, I have a feeling that some of those that are critical of Campbell's interest in para-psychological abilities quite enjoyed Babylon 5 with its PSI Corp....).

As a personal aside, these types of stories aren't my cup of tea either, but there are certainly enough stories that do entertain me that I am quite enjoying Analog 1969...
Very interesting analysis, DeltaV, thanks. I enjoy your reviews.

You often find, when one reads source material, that an 'accepted wisdom' in many fields is either simplistic, an exaggeration, or just plain wrong, and that is perhaps the case here, with late '60's Analogs.

Incidentally, I have some additional interest in 1969 Analog, as it's the year of my birth. I was a fetus when the January and February issues were released, but had made an appearance by March, and was therefore around for the moon landing. It was great :).
 
July 1969

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Two Novelettes:

And Comfort to the Enemy by Stanley Schmidt. The alien Reska have established an outpost on the world of Slepo IV. With no apparent evidence of intelligent life on the planet, the Reska begin explorations for minerals and other resources. However there is indeed a local sentient species and they don't like outsiders on their planet. Nope, not at all...

The furry aliens on the front cover rejected technology in their distant past. They are, however, masters of biological manipulation, and kill billions of Reska in germ warfare to eliminate the threat to their world once and for all.

The Man from R.O.B.O.T. by Harry Harrison. The people on the planet Slagter also don't like visitors. But when a member of the Galactic Census goes missing on the planet, along with his space ship, an undercover agent is sent in to find out what happened.

The short novel is The Mind-Changer by Verge Foray. In the far future, Earth is divided up between two factions: those with psi powers and those without. A researcher has an idea that might bridge the gap between the two powers and reduce the distrust between them.


Short Stories:

The Great Intellect Boom by Christopher Anvil. A drug company has come up with a pill to increase IQ levels. And, of course, there are unintended consequences as well as a lesson learned.

The Choice by Keith Laumer. The three-man crew of a Space Arm cruiser are captured by a machine intelligence convinced that humans are in a pell-mell rush to destruction ... and grants short-cuts to oblivion.

The Empty Balloon by Jack Wodhams. An agent captured by the Other Side is interrogated with a new mind-reading machine ... that doesn't quite work to expectations.



Issue Notes

Verge Foray is the pen name of Howard Myers who passed away at the age of 41, in 1971. There were apparently two collections of his stories published in the early 2000's by Baen...The Analytical Laboratory results for the April issue have the Opportunist at top spot with 1.60 and The Five Way Secret Agent (Part 1) in second at 2.02.
 
Didn't know about the Verge Foray collections by Baen (and will now be on the lookout for them) but did manage to nab this when it came out:
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August 1969

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Four novelettes this month:

The Teacher by Colin Kapp. Civilization on the planet Tanic is slowly crumbling in the face of constant pressure and attacks from the planet's large reptile population. Terra has stepped in to provide what help it can by upgrading the technology of one of the local tribes ... technology that will soon be a two-edged sword for the local inhabitants.

The Timesweepers by Keith Laumer. Early excursions in the past affected the flow of time and disrupted history. The second generation of time travelers sought to undo those errors, only to cause further chaos. Now agents from an even further future era attempt to clean up the stream of time.

All Fall Down by John Phillifent. A ship and her crew must make an emergency planet on a primitive world, only to find themselves virtual prisoners of the local despot ... alongside an anthropological survey team already being held captive. Brutal punishment is meted out to those who do not obey, and escape appears impossible.

Androtomy and the Scion by Jack Wodhams. In the shadowy world of secret agents, one side has developed a technique to not only totally control a captured agent, but to also know exactly what he is doing ... and what he is thinking.

Two short stories:

Pressure by Harry Harrison. Two scientists and a pilot descend into Saturn's atmosphere to go all the way to the bottom, to hopefully land on the planet's core. But things go awry when it is time to leave.

Womb to Tomb by Joseph Wesley. The Terran Federation was losing a war against the alien Kwartah. But the tide is slowly turning after Terra developed a new type of space fighter pilot. A senator visits the rehabilitation institute for those returning from the front lines, and one of the patients is his son.


Double Science Fact articles in this issue: Minds and Molecules (chemicals and enzymes used by the brain) and Chemistry AD1819 (the use of lead and mercury in chemistry at that time).

Issue Notes

The Analytical Library has the results for May: Persistence is in first place with 2.2, then The Five Way Secret Agent with 2.65...Miller discusses fandom and fanzines in his month's edition of The Reference Library, and reviews All Our Yesterdays by Harry Warner Jr, the story of 1940s SF fandom. Interesting discussion of how things used to be. Are there still SF clubs around?

One curious coincidence with this magazine. I bought a bunch of Analogs from an eBay dealer based who knows where, but this particular issue has the owner's address stamp in it (old style rubber & ink), and he lived about 3 miles from the house where I live now. Checked on Google; the address is now a parking lot.



I found the fact that Persistence won first place in the reader's poll interesting. The story itself is a bit dry ... future engineers and technicians trying to learn and understand the control and comm systems of a captured enemy space ship with quite different technology. But the fact that this story finished first kinda tells me that there were quite a few techs and engineers amongst the readership back then. I myself have had to study, dismantle and replace process control systems installed by the competition (often with missing documentation and schematics) so I can imagine and appreciate the challenges implied in the story. Gosh, I can think of a few times when it would have been great to have had Captain Carter from Stargate working with me! Five minutes, ten minutes top, and everything figured out! :)
 
September 1969

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Three novellas this issue:

Your Haploid Heart by James Tiptree Jr. Two scientists return to the alien world Esthaa to study the inhabitants, 100 years after the mysterious loss of the first research mission. Surprised to learn that there are not just one but two sentient species living on the planet, their research uncovers truths that some would prefer to remain hidden.

Stimulus-Response by Herbert Jacob Bernstein. A physician keen on learning more about the activity of the human brain makes a surprising discovery with his pet beagle. With the help of an advanced diagnostic machine, it appears that his dog is able to make his simple wishes come true. But would it work with humans?

In HIs Image by Robert Chilson. A controversial researcher develops an advanced cyborg model, basing it on human DNA that has had a few modifications. Starting with three young female cyborgs based on the mythical faun, he enlists both a publicity firm and a studio in Hollywood to popularize his new creation.

The short stories are:

Starman by W MacFarlane. Dord Preble has had enough of working on a starship. Eyeing the local beauties at a routine trade stop on a remote planet, he demands to be left behind when the ship leaves. A simple life free of the complications of technology is where he wants to be ... or so he thinks.

Damper by E G von Wald. Weather control is where success lies in a slightly futuristic society, and Joe Parker is determined to make his mark as a weather technologist. His first assignment is in Africa where the local politics are a lot harder to predict than the weather.

The Visitors by Jack Wodhams. Swayed by the scientists on board, the captain of a contact mission reluctantly lands on a remote planet to meet the locals. And, as usual, things don't go according to plan.


Two science fact articles: The Big Boosters of the USSR (Soviet launch vehicles), and Political Science Mark II (political pressure overruling science. Jeepers! as if that ever happens!)


Issue Notes

The Analytical Library has the results for June: Artifact by J B Clarke (2.60), and Dramatic Mission by Anne McCaffrey (2.67) are top two...Miller in The Reference Library looks at several 'best of' anthologies, discusses The Andromeda Strain and lists New Lands by Charles Fort in list of reprints. I mention this latter book as I believe there was a relatively recent novella in Analog that had a connection to Fort.


First issue of 1969 that was a bit of a struggle to finish. I liked the novella Your Haploid Heart ... at least the first 75% ... but found the conclusion somewhat illogical. Cover catches the attention though: someone's gonna lay some serious smack down. The less said about the other two novellas the better.
 
October 1969

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Well, this cover is certainly different.

A new serial starts this month: The Yngling by John Dalmas. A thousand years in the future, centuries after a devastating plague, civilization has managed to claw itself back up to a medieval level. In Scandinavia, the climate is changing and tension is increasing amongst the neo-Viking clans. Banished by the tribal Ting, Nils Jarnhand is exiled across the Baltic Sea where he is soon enmeshed in conflict with a growing power in the East. Jarnhand also comes in contact with a secretive society that helps him develop certain ... abilities.


Two novelettes:

The Big Rock by Robert Chilson. Convicts are shipped out to an airless world, Alcatrez, where they are left to their own devices. Forming a brutal society, some thrive and others don't.

Compassion by J.R. Pierce. In the near future, the city folk living on Manhattan Island are culturally isolated from the rest of the world. Sari, an employee of Urban Affairs who has never left the Island, takes a trip to the far west and learns the secret of reaching her full potential.


And three short stories:

A Relic of War by Keith Laumer. On a world once on the front line of the war with the alien Axorc, a Bolo sits in the village square waiting to be decommissioned.

Test Ultimate by Christopher Anvil. Interstellar Patrol cadets must complete one final challenge that tests the measure of their courage.

Jump by William Earls. Jim Lacey, spacer, gets sick whenever the ship jumps into hyperspace. He bails on Titan, hooks up with a shuttle stewardess, and paints the town red.


Science Fact is Proton to Proton. Discusses photosynthesis.

The Analytical Laboratory results for July are And Comfort to the Enemy in first (2.16) and The Mind-Changer in second (2.36).



The Bolo story got me reading up a bit more about this series of stories. Wikipedia has an interesting note: "The Bolo stories inspired the board game Ogre whose creators originally intended to license the stories. For cost reasons this did not occur and a different background was invented for the game, with its titular tank deliberately being made self-unaware in order to differentiate it."

As well, there are a number of other authors who have written stories featuring Bolos. Does anybody have any comments on this series? Any good stories to read?
 

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