Nebula Award Stories 8

by Isaac Asimov (Editor)

Other authorsArthur C. Clarke (Author), Robert Silverberg (Author), Frederik Pohl (Author), Gene Wolfe (Author), Harlan Ellison (Author), Poul Anderson (Author), Joanna Russ (Author), William Rotssler (Author)
Paperback, 1975

Status

Available

Call number

823.9

Library's review

Indeholder "Isaac Asimov: Introduction. So why aren't we rich?", "Arthur C. Clarke: A Meeting with Medusa", "Frederik Pohl: Shafferty among the immortals", "William Rotssler: Patron of the arts", "Joanna Russ: When it changed", "Harlan Ellison: On the downhill side", "Gene Wolfe: The fifth head of
Show More
Cerberus", "Robert Silverberg: When we went to see the end of the world", "Poul Anderson: Goat Song", "Award-winning science fiction, 1965-1972", "The Nebula awards", "The Hugo awards".

"Isaac Asimov: Introduction. So why aren't we rich?" handler om ???
"Arthur C. Clarke: A Meeting with Medusa" handler om at et heliumluftskib med fusionsreaktor forulykker, piloten kommer slemt til skade, men bliver genopbygget, styrer den første bemandede sonde til Jupiter og møder her kæmpemæssige livsformer.
"Frederik Pohl: Shafferty among the immortals" handler om ???
"William Rotssler: Patron of the arts" handler om ???
"Joanna Russ: When it changed" handler om ???
"Harlan Ellison: On the downhill side" handler om ???
"Gene Wolfe: The fifth head of Cerberus" handler om ???
"Robert Silverberg: When we went to see the end of the world" handler om ???
"Poul Anderson: Goat Song" handler om ???
"Award-winning science fiction, 1965-1972" handler om ???
"The Nebula awards" handler om ???
"The Hugo awards" handler om hvem der har vundet hugo priserne fra og med 1965 til og med 1972.

???
Show Less

Publication

Panther (1975), Paperback, 272 pages

User reviews

LibraryThing member RBeffa
After a somewhat disappointing Nebula 4 (1968) read, Nebula 8 (1972) is a vast improvement. The 3 winners and 5 runners-up provide some solid reading here. Missing is LeGuin's "The Word For World is Forest" which took the Hugo that year for best novella, although it placed third for the Nebula. I
Show More
remind myself that the "Science Fiction Writers of America" choose and vote for the Nebulas as opposed to the general reader and fan rabble that is a member of the World Conventions each year that gets to vote for the Hugo. Between the two awards each year most of the very good ones get at least nominated but the "best" each year is always a bit of a gamble. So here are the contents (from ISFDB):

ix • Introduction: So Why Aren't We Rich? (1973) • essay by Isaac Asimov
3 • A Meeting With Medusa • (1971) • novella Nebula winner by Arthur C. Clarke
50 • Shaffery Among the Immortals • (1972) • short story by Frederik Pohl
67 • Patron of the Arts • (1972) • novelette by William Rotsler
90 • When It Changed • (1972) • short story Nebula winner by Joanna Russ
100 • On the Downhill Side • (1972) • short story by Harlan Ellison
117 • The Fifth Head of Cerberus • (1972) • novella by Gene Wolfe
181 • When We Went to See the End of the World • (1972) • shortstory by Robert Silverberg
191 • Goat Song • (1972) • novelette Nebula winner by Poul Anderson

Notable among the stories to me were:

Clarke's "A Meeting With Medusa" starts this off very well with a hard science fiction tale of the first manned exploration of Jupiter and the surprising discovery of Jovian life forms. I really liked this one. I've read this story at least once before but long ago so that it was fresh to me. There is a lot of action and excitement in this one. Something that popped out at me was Clarke using the "Prime Directive" and first contact rules when the aliens are encountered and deemed possibly intelligent. As far as I know, the Prime Directive originated in the Star Trek TV series just a few years before this novella.

Russ's "When It Changed" is a powerful story about an all female society that has lived and survived without men for 600 years after a plague that left no men alive. And then men return. I have read this before and was pleased to revisit. Very deserving of the Nebula Award for short story.

In his introduction to Gene Wolfe's now classic "The Fifth Head of Cerebus," Asimov notes that it lost the Nebula by a hair to the Clarke story. I liked Clarke's story but I think this one is superior. Once I started reading I could scarcely put it down. To discuss the story itself would be to really spoil the pleasure in reading it. Broadly it is a future colonial society not on earth. Two brothers are kept apart from almost everything and everyone, but slowly as the years go by they are exposed to more and mysteries are revealed. They have a tutor from whom they learn much in early years. Interesting story.

I didn't really care for Silverberg's "When We Went To See The End of the World." I found each of the other stories interesting, with the singular exception of Pohl's "Shaffery Among the Immortals."
Show Less

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1973

Physical description

272 p.; 17.7 cm

ISBN

0586040803 / 9780586040805

Local notes

Omslag: Anthony Roberts
Omslaget viser en blæksprutteagtig ting, der rækker ud efter et luftskibslignende rumfartøj
Indskannet omslag - N650U - 150 dpi

Pages

272

Library's rating

Rating

½ (11 ratings; 3.9)

DDC/MDS

823.9
Page: 0.2801 seconds