[January 31, 1965] Janus, Facing Both Ways (February 1965 Analog)

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by Gideon Marcus

Facing the Future, Honoring the Past

January (likely) takes its name from Janus, the Roman god of new beginnings, and there have been few Januaries so worthy of this legacy than the latest one.

On January 20, Lyndon Baines Johnson took the oath of office of the President of the United States.  He had done so once before, on that tragic afternoon in November 1963.  This time, LBJ was sworn in on his own merit, having won the last general election in one of the biggest trouncings in history.  He has already outlined a bold agenda, expanding his Great Society with proposals to expand medicare and social security, combat poverty and joblessness, and further equalize the rights of all Americans.  Along with the Democratic supermajority in Congress, we are going to see legislative movement the likes of which have not been seen in more than twenty years.

Just four days later, Sir Winston Churchill, the United Kingdom's leader through most of World War 2, was felled by a brain hemorrhage at the age of 90.  His state funeral on the 29th was appropriately tremendous, and flags were lowered to half-mast throughout the world.  The Left seem to be on the move in Britain, too, with the Liberals winning their first victory in over a decade.  Have we arrived at an unfettered age of progress?

In the eddies of time

Not within the pages of John W. Campbell's Analog, which plugs along this month with the same combination of hard science fiction and workmanlike writing.  Moreover, Frank Herbert's Prophet of Dune neither begins nor concludes; it merely plods on.  Well, to be fair, the cover date is February 1965…


by Walter Hortens

Program for Lunar Landings by Joe Poyer

We are now four years on since President Kennedy's momentous declaration, to send Americans to the Moon and back before decade's end.  Joe Poyer's article outlines the phases of lunar exploration that will succeed Project Apollo's first missions.

Fascinating topic.  Rather dull execution.  Three stars.

The Mailman Cometh, by Rick Raphael


by Walter Hortens

The fellow who gave us depictions of government employed sewer rats and tales of high speed highway patrol is back with a story of far future mail delivery.  Centuries from now, automated mail drones will transport packages across the stars.  But it's up to the sweaty, stinky folk in orbiting stations to sort the stuff onto its final destination.

I don't know that I buy the setup, and this is more of "a day in the life" than something with an actual plot.  That said, Raphael always writes pleasantly, and he's not shy about writing good women characters.

Three stars.

Photojournalist, by Mack Reynolds


by Robert Swanson

It's a terrible thing to be a cameraman and miss the big scoop.  But how much worse must it be to be at all the right places at all the right times and never have your pictures published?

No one in modern day has ever seen Jerry Scott's shots, and he's been spotted everywhere, from Mussolini's hanging to the latest riots.  Is he unlucky?  Or does he have an entirely different audience?

Pretty good story, though with a page more in the middle than is necessary.  Plus, it gives Reynolds a chance to use some of his lingo from his Joe Mauser stories (which will instantly tip you off as to what's going on).

Three stars.

The Pork Chop Tree, by James H. Schmitz


by Hector Castellon

What ill could possibly be spoken of the trees of Maccadon?  All parts of them are edible.  They obligingly create hollows in themselves as shelters for animals and people alike.  Not one offensive characteristic has been cataloged.

Is there such a concept as too much of a good thing?

This story has a lot in common with Norman Spinrad's recent Child of Mind, though without the offensive bits.  And also the particularly interesting ones.

Three stars.

Coincidence Day, by John Brunner


by Leo Summers

In the NASEEZ (North American South Eastern Extraterrestrial Zoo), the most exciting time to visit is Coincidence Day, when all of the biorhythms of the assembled creatures line up, and they can all be viewed active at once.  The most sought-out resident is a tripodal alien dubbed Chuckaluck, a charming, easy-going soul. 

But is he the attraction, or the observer?

A whimsical, multilayered piece.  It almost feels like a story Sheckley would write were he British.

Four stars.

The Prophet of Dune (Part 2 of 5), by Frank Herbert


by John Schoenherr

Finally, a short installment of Part 2 of Book 2 of the Dune franchise.  Young Paul Atreides and his mother, Lady Jessica, have made it across the deadly desert of Arrakis to what counts for local civilization.  But do the still-suited, spice-addicted Fremen offer succor or peril?

This was actually one of the better spans of the story, though Frank Herbert still employs third person omniscient italic as his perspective.  Three stars.

What a happy surprise to find Analog near the top of the magazine pack this month, clocking in at 3.2 stars.  In fact, it was a rather stellar month in general, Galaxy getting an impressive 3.5 stars, BOTH Fantastic and Amazing earning 3.3 stars, Fantasy and Science Fiction returning to form with 3.2 stars, and the British New Worlds achieving 3.1 while Science Fantasy scored 3.

Only IF and Worlds of Tomorrow came over par, at 2.7 and 2.5 stars, respectively (though the latter did have the excellent Niven novella, Planet/World of Ptavvs).

On the other hand, out of a whopping 55 pieces of fiction, women only wrote four of them.  The ratio is getting worse, folks.

Meanwhile, speaking of endings, it appears Analog will be a slick for just one more month before returning to the rack with all the other digest sizes.  Apparently, there just wasn't enough advertising to sustain the bedsheet format.  I guess the Venn diagram of science fiction readers and cognac drinkers didn't intersect much…

I honestly won't miss the big magazine.  It fit awkwardly on my shelf.  What do y'all think?






4 thoughts on “[January 31, 1965] Janus, Facing Both Ways (February 1965 Analog)”

  1. The bedsheet size will likely be very vexing in the future when one goes to organize one's collection. One may find themselves having a difficult time trying to remember where they are.

  2. The return to digest will be very welcome. I've never liked the slick format (for Analog; it's fine for Life or Time). As I pointed out last month, there actually seems to be less space for stories than in a digest.

    As noted, the article on what's coming in space exploration was a dull take on an interesting topic. Deadly dull, to be honest. I continue to be amazed that Analog has the worst science writing among the science fiction mags. When the articles aren't sheer crackpottery, they tend to be in the worst sort of technical journal prose.

    Rick Raphael continues to give us civil service science fiction. And he makes it interesting. Such an odd little subgenre. What he does best here is not make it apparent that these guys aren't really utter slobs by nature. Bringing the reader around along with the postal inspector was a good choice.

    I quite enjoyed "Photojournalist". It is a couple of pages too lone, and it's also a pity that the introductory illustration gave the game away right from the off, rather than letting the reader figure it out just ahead of the narrator.

    "The Pork Chop Tree" was all right, I guess. It started a little too in medias res and finished rather abruptly. To be honest, it felt like an excerpt from a longer work.

    Brunner seems to have firmly crossed the Atlantic. Good for him, it's a larger market. I quite enjoy his stuff when he isn't being too artistic. This was a good one. It makes a nice counterpoint to Damon Knight's "The Visitor at the Zoo" from a couple of years ago.

    "Prophet of Dune" finally brought in a little action and it was well done. Hopefully we'll see some more. Although, it was in the action scene where Herbert's tendency to skip back and forth between viewpoint characters in a single scene was really apparent. Anyway, it continues to be fascinating world building, if nothing else.

    And one of the best months we've seen overall in ages. Can the trend continue? Probably not, but we can hope.

  3. I don't like the "bed sheet" format; harder to hold and harder to read.

    "The Mailman Cometh" had some pretty sophomoric humor, but there's something that appeals to me about this author's stories of folks just doing their jobs.  Nice to see a woman (I mean "girl") take control of things, too.

    "Photojournalist" was obvious from the start, but well-written.  This author always convinces me he knows what he's talking about.

    "The Pork Chop Tree" was nearly all exposition, although the rather nasty twist ending was a surprise.

    "Coincidence Day" was a very light piece, but fairly witty.

    All in all, competent fiction, if not outstanding.

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