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Out of This World 2

(First published in 1961, 184 p.) In Out of This World Choice (Out of This World 2 & Out of This World 5) edited by Amabel Williams-Ellis and Mably Owen, Blackie, 1972, 369 p in total.

This contains a collection of Science Fiction stories written in the traditional style. Well, the book was first published in 1961.

The Trouble with Emily by James M White is one of the author’s Sector General stories set in a giant hospital where the ailments of many different types of creature are investigated and – hopefully – cured. This one entails acclimatising a brontosaurus analogue to its new environment with the aid of a telepathic alien.

The title of The Dusty Death by John Kippax is slightly misleading. Its two main characters are on a trip to survey the crater Aristarchus on the Moon when their vehicle tilts over and sinks into the dust. One of them is claustrophobic. The story shows its age by referring to their being no ‘girls’ on the Moon.

Another Word for Man by Robert Presslie is the story of H’Rola, a shape changing alien who speaks in a voice like an organ, hauled up by a fisherman working from a remote island. The local priest, Pierre St Emilion, views the alien as close to the Devil. H’Rola turns out to be a trainee doctor with unusual methods of effecting cures.

The Railways up on Cannis by Colin Kapp is a light-hearted piece. Cannis-four is a planet riddled with volcanoes which makes the building – or, rather, reconstructing since the original system has been destroyed by a war – of railways more than a little problematic. It is obviously a job for the Unorthodox Engineers.

Machine Made by J T Mcintosh is set in a library where the Machine has been put in place to answer problems. The cleaner, Rose, is supposedly dim-witted but assiduous about her job. Despite warnings against interacting with it she acquiesces to one of the Machine’s requests.

But Who Can Replace a Man? by Brian Aldiss is set among a hierarchical group of agricultural robots whose orders one day fail to turn up – because there are no humans left in the city to send them. Some of them set off in search of a new role.

The Gift of Gab by Jack Vance is set on the planet Sabria where humans are extracting minerals from the sea water. Supposedly there are no intelligent indigenous life-forms (harming whom is against the law) but creatures called dekabrachs start killing members of a work crew. They are not the villains of the piece.

The Still Waters by Lester Del Rey features the space ship Midas, the last of the ion-blaster fusion driven ships, whose owner can no longer afford its upkeep and is trying to find a use for her.

Pedant’s corner:- a missing comma before a piece of direct speech, “the air in the lock whipped out into the void” (surely a terrible waste? Air on the Moon would be a precious resource and certainly recycled back into the main body of the base rather than vented out,) “stories of fisherman being lured by the Black One” (fishermen,) “Chablis’ conclusions” (Chablis’s,) Williams’ (Williams’s,) “a fission motor” (a fusion motor. It was being contrasted with fission motors.)

The Survival Game by Colin Kapp

Science Fiction Book Club, 1976, 184p

The Survival Game

I have fond memories of this author’s 1972 novel The Patterns of Chaos which had some humorous aspects. The Survival Game is from four years later and unfortunately shows its age.

Two star kings are in dispute over whether or not to join those aligned with Earth in a federation. To resolve matters they agree to have their respective champions engage in a game of survival on the dangerous planet Avida. King Oontara chooses an Earthman, Colonel Bogaert, as his (unbeknowing) champion. His rival King Xzan has chosen a former resident of Avida as his. Meanwhile a Pretender to the throne of the emperor Kanizar has taken advantage of his absence to launch an attack against his capital planet. Kanizar’s wife and children escape and accidentally become Bogaert’s companions while they are trying to get to safety on Earth and stow away on the ship on which he is hi-jacked to Avida.

I suppose we are to take from the book’s title that the bigger game in which all the civilisations (I use the word loosely) in the novel are engaged is of survival but the treatment can not carry such a weight. Neither is the staleness of the premise the only problematic feature, the characterisation is uniformly minimal – not to say non-existent. There is an attempt at humour, of a sort, as Bogaert is sometimes referred to as ‘Colonel Bogey’.

The Survival Game is the sort of story where people from Earth are called Terrans and are infinitely resourceful and competent, effortlessly running rings around other inhabitants of the galaxy. In the past 35 years we have, thankfully, gone beyond that.

It’s just possible that this was a send-up of a style of writing around at the time, but if so I do not recall it and it does not read as pastiche. File it in ‘of its time’ and move on. Perhaps I should not go back to look at The Patterns of Chaos.

PS I noticed on Library Thing that The Survival Game has 4½ stars. Come on guys! You have to be kidding.

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