[July 14, 1964] TO THE MOON, ALICE (the August 1964 Amazing)


by John Boston

Long Hot Summer, Barely Begun

So, we have a new civil rights law, one which should transform life in the segregated South—not to mention the less overtly segregated North—if implemented.  Note the last phrase.  Meanwhile, in Mississippi, three civil rights workers involved in voter registration efforts have been missing for three weeks, after being pulled over for speeding by a local sheriff, then released.  Goodman, Chaney, and Schwerner: remember those names.  I wonder if we will hear them again. 

The Issue at Hand

This August Amazing features on its cover Robert F. Young’s The HoneyEarthers, on its face a depressing prospect.  After his tiresome rehashes of Bible stories and fairy tales, is Young now sending Ralph Kramden into space?  Fortunately, no.  This time, Young has actually tried to write a story.  It’s pretty terrible, but still, the effort is there.  Attention must be paid to this man . . . briefly.


by Richard McKenna

The HoneyEarthers, by Robert F. Young

Young essays a rather complicated plot, and if you have any interest in reading the story, you might want to do so now.  Okay, back?  It begins with an unnamed kid working as an ice miner in Saturn’s rings, and he gets into fatal-looking trouble.  Next, there’s an older man, Aaron, escorting a younger woman on the HoneyEarth Express to the Moon—his son’s wife Fleurette.  His son Ronny (Aaron Jr.) has left her and is fleeing prosecution for tax evasion.  The father is in love with his son’s wife, but this trip is to be entirely chaste, even though the voyage is typically for honeymooners, some of whose amatory antics on the flight are mentioned with disapproval. 

On the Moon, Aaron discloses that Ronny was the doomed ice miner, whom Aaron rescued in the nick of time and then adopted.  But Ronny experienced space fright and developed space fugue and can’t remember anything before the rescue.  And there’s more!  In the interim, Aaron went to the stars, spent a number of years on two different planets, and made a bunch of money.  Now, he says, Ronny (having fled to space) is about to have a second space fright episode, which will bring back his memory of the years he lost to amnesia from the first episode, while cancelling out his memory of the intervening years, including Aaron and Fleurette. 


by George Schelling

By this point it seems clear that Aaron and Ronny, decades apart in age, are the same person.  But . . . where’s the necessary time travel?  As mentioned, Aaron traveled to two extrasolar planets, then came back to Mars, and headed for Saturn to rescue Ronny.  Now I know what you’re thinking—this guy has confused time dilation from faster-than-light interstellar travel with time travel! 

But no.  Young has instead relied on that time-honored technique of the field: just making stuff up.  In this case, it’s called “circumventing the space-time equalization schedule,” a phrase that is not explained but which the author apparently thinks means he can bend time to his will and the needs of the plot.  And after Aaron’s long anguished confession of all this history to Fleurette, it looks like he’s going to get his just reward.

All this takes place in the overarching context of Young’s familiar overbearing sentimentality about beautiful young women, which reaches a crescendo, fever pitch, or something like that.  To wit:

“A girl stepped into the room.

“She had dark-brown hair. She was tall and slender. She had gray eyes and a round full face. The girlish dress she was wearing began below her shoulders, and the firelight had
already fallen in love with her smooth clear skin. Meadow flowers grew around her, and her mouth had the redness of the wild raspberries that grew in the fields of his youth. Spring resided in the dew-brightness of her eyes; her cheeks held the hue of frost-kissed leaves. Spring, summer, fall and finally winter in the snow-whiteness of her hands. . . .

“She came like a summer wind across the room and kissed him, and he knew the fields once again: the fields and the woods and the warm summer sun, and the red and succulent berries that had stained his lips and filled his mouth with sweetness.”

I believe the critics’ technical term for this is “icky.” There’s plenty of it.  There are also other comment-worthy items, such as the notion of space fright, which causes amnesia, but a second episode of space fright will bring back the errant memories, a height of contrivance equal to the “space-time equalization schedule.” But enough.  One star, with a ribbon for the labor this confection obviously required.

Selection, by Ursula K. Le Guin


by George Schelling

This jokey short story is in some ways the antithesis of The HoneyEarthers (by being jokey, for starters).  On a colony planet, marriages are arranged by computer, and there’s no appeal.  The protagonist, Miss Ekstrom-Ngungu, intensely dislikes her designated husband, Mr. Chang-Oliver, but in the absence of other options, they go through with it, and the bottom line seems to be that people get over things fairly easily in the face of a little danger and the need to get on with life.  The selection process is presided over by a Mr. Gosseyn-Ho; appropriating the name of the protagonist of van Vogt’s The World of Null-A seems to be a dig at the long history of pseudo-rationality in SF.  The story is a lightweight satire but is less cartoony than most of its type, with more density of detail than usual about the colony planet and the work of the colonists.  Le Guin is a very solid writer even in her more relaxed moments.  Three stars.

Valedictory, by Phyllis Gotlieb


by George Schelling

Phyllis Gotlieb, author of the rather overblown but underperforming serial Sunburst, is back with a miniature, Valedictory, in which a woman in training to be a time-traveling researcher thinks she needs to go back and comfort her younger self.  Like Le Guin’s (and unlike Young’s!), this is a story about getting over things, rendered with nice economy.  Three stars.

Furnace of the Blue Flame, by Robert Rohrer


by Robert Adragna

The precocious Robert Rohrer (b. 1946), who I would guess has just graduated from high school, contributes Furnace of the Blue Flame, but might as well not have bothered.  It’s a capably written but terminally cliched post-apocalyptic story—you know, the kind that refers to “the still-scorched fields south of Nuyuk . . . the rocky wastes surrounding Bigchi . . . the plains of baked clay north of Lanna,” and so forth.  Morg, a lone wanderer and apostle of knowledge, disposes of a local petty tyrant who keeps his people in ignorance. Morg uses the surviving nuclear reactor of the title to beat the bad guys.  Two stars.

Zelerinda, by Gordon Walters


by George Schelling

The last item of fiction is Zelerinda, a long and turgid novelet by Gordon Walters, said to be a pseudonym of George W. Locke, who has published a few scattered stories under the two names.  Zelerinda is a planet that is missing half the elements in the periodic table and has a temperature of 600 degrees F., so life on it is impossible—or so one would think.  There’s been a series of nuclear explosions, which aren’t exactly natural, are they?  So two guys are sent to investigate, one of whom possesses a poorly defined psi talent called delvining, or possessing a delvin, which he thinks he has to hide, though that idea is quickly forgotten.  It’s quite badly written and about three times too long, though the ultimate revelation is at least mildly clever.  Two stars.

Mort Weisinger: The Superman Behind Superman, by Sam Moskowitz

Sam Moskowitz’s SF Profile is Mort Weisinger: The Superman Behind Superman, which immediately raises two questions: who cares, and why bother?  Meaning no disrespect to that shallow debasement of the conceptual armory of science fiction—er, let me try that again.  While Superman in all his incarnations is no doubt of interest to students of popular culture, broadly speaking, one would think that Moskowitz would find higher priorities in this series on prominent SF writers.  That said, it’s a perfectly adequate summary of a low-profile brief career in SF leading to a more substantial one in comics.  Most interestingly, during World War II, the government found it necessary to suppress two Superman strips concerning atomic energy.  Two stars.

Summing Up

So Amazing continues to idle, with the occasional loud backfire from the likes of Robert F. Young, and intervals of smooth humming from, this time, the very competent Ursula K. Le Guin and the getting-the-hang Phyllis Gotlieb.  Next month, Edmond Hamilton and James H. Schmitz are promised.  Expect no sudden shifting of gears.


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4 thoughts on “[July 14, 1964] TO THE MOON, ALICE (the August 1964 Amazing)”

  1. Perhaps the best thing that can be said for "The HoneyEarthers" is that Young has done something other than a retelling of a Biblical or legendary story. The sad thing is that the bones of a decent story are here. They're just put together incorrectly and fleshed out poorly. On top of the flaws John already mentioned, there is the suggestion that the rights of women have taken a huge step backwards. But come up with a better reason for the time travel and put it in the hands of a writer who can better deal with emotion and this could have been good. Pity. Maybe Cele was influenced by the recent changes in her life.

    The Le Guin was probably the weakest thing we've seen from her brief career. It's still quite readable and I have no quibble with John's rating. I just expect better from this author.

    Gottlieb's story was all right. Better than her novel, certainly. Her skills might not be quite up to a difficult theme like confronting your past and the ending was a bit out of nowhere, but a decent read.

    "Furnace of the Blue Flame" felt like something written before Mr. Rohrer was born, if only they'd known about nuclear power and the apocalyptic potential of World War Three. The blurb summed up the themes of the story better than the story did. And I really don't see how the protagonist wasn't exposed to a fatal dose of radiation.

    "Zelerinda" is a confused mess. Far too long, as John notes, and there are a lot of plot components that are simply dropped or ignored. And while the ending was moderately clever, I felt that it was also obvious.

    Really, the only place I disagree with John this month is the biography. It's one of Moskowitz's better efforts, staying well away from the hagiography which is so often a feature of this series. But I think Mort Weisinger deserves a spot here. He has a long history in fandom, and agent and did decent work as a pulp editor in science fiction before he moved into comics.

  2. I'm going to have to confess that I actually liked "The HoneyEarthers" fairly well (despite the terrible title.) I enjoy Robert F. Young when he's in his sloppy sentimental mood rather than his retell-an-old-story mood.  My only problem, really, was the fact that we've seen the gimmick before, in his story "The Star Fisherman" (which I liked very much.) I would have given it a solid three stars, and if he wasn't rehashing the previous story, maybe even a modest four.  I guess I'm a sucker for this kind of romantic claptrap.

    "Selection" was OK.  Kind of like Sheckley, with a lighter touch.  A minor work, but pleasant.

    I thought "Valedictory" was quite good, maybe the best story in the issue.

    "Furnace of the Blue Flame" was so-so.  No surprises along the way.  It read like sword-and-sorcery mixed with post-apocalyptic fiction, and the two didn't always blend together too well.

    "Zelerinda" was a mess, tedious, and I didn't buy the science behind it all all.  (The radioactive element acts just like water in a super-hot environment?  Seemed unlikely to me.) I also didn't care for the author's fondness for odd-sounding words.  The worst story in the issue.

    I note that Mr. Boston is too modest to mention the presence of his own contribution to the letter column (unless there's another SF fan named John Boston running around.) I'll refrain from commenting on the fact that you don't care for Cordwainer Smith, except to wipe a tear away from my Robert-F.-Young-influenced eye.

  3. Comment #2 above looks like some sort of spam/virus thing?

    "That is an queer advantage right for victory. galacticjourney.org"
    plus a dubious masked bit link.

    I'm not clicking on it, anyway.

    1. Yes, it looks like some joker sneaked into the Galactic Journey offices, sat down at the typewriter, and composed a nonsensical message.

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