By Mx Kris Vyas-Myall
The World Cup starts later this month in Mexico and excitement in England is palpable. Winning four years ago at Wembley has raised expectations significantly, and there is a real hope that England can repeat the success Brazil had in the early 60s, to win two years-on-the-trot.
Possibly one of the strangest ways this has manifested is in a new album, sung by the Current World Cup Squad!
In its special circular football sleeve, you can discover what it sounds like to have Bobby Moore singing Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da or Gordon Banks covering Lovey-Dovey. (From what I have heard of it on the radio, consider my curiosity fully sated).
Off the pitch, there is once again an international competition for my attention in the anthology releases. With Carnell leading his team for another round of New Writings facing off against new fiction from the Soviet Union. Three years ago, the two countries faced off in one of my articles, now let’s see how each of these new seven stories matchup:
New Writings in SF-17
In his introduction Carnell notes how much the world has changed in his lifetime and says that continued technological change is the theme of this issue.
More Things in Heaven and Earth by H. A. Hargreaves
Alan Hamilton is Senior Lecturer at University Television Central, a Tri-Vid system linking universities. The performances of Shakespeare are broadcast for 60,000 Students who watch together and can chime in. This is then edited and sent out to a further 180,000 home viewers. They are preparing to have the process opened up for a public view, when they discover they have a telepath on the course, who is communicating with people using Alan’s voice.
I have heard other people cite this story as one of the most interesting SF pieces of recent years and worth the price of entry alone. As such, it seems inevitable that I would disagree. I found it slight, dull, overly long and a chore to get through. It is just over 50 pages long but took me almost 3 days to read. It is not offensive to me as much as just forgettable.
Two Stars
Aspect of Environment by L. Davison
I could find no information on this author. Could it even be one of those rarest of species, a woman writing for a British publication? Anyone with more information, please write to us at the Journey.
On their way back to earth on an unsuccessful mission, Brandt overrides the ship’s computer to follow a trail of radiation. Even though the other two scientists, Spengler and Olga, are not entirely happy with the plan, they follow along until they discover its origin as a tiny planet. Once a computer bug causes the ship to crash-land, they go in search of the source. It turns out to be one of the strangest results of evolution, an organic computer.
This whole story felt a bit dull and pat to me. It seems to want to make some kind of grand point on the nature of chance in our lives and the shaping of the universe but it rings hollow. There is also a weird situation where Brandt spends a lot of time ogling Olga which just stretches a thin tale even further.
Two Stars
Soul Survivors by Lee Harding
One of my favourite Australian writers gives us an SF take on the Christmas ghost story. Elliot Westerman's wife and two children were killed in a Transmat accident. He now lives in his empty old house, reliving his time with them on the Home Memories equipment, which projects old scenes in perfect detail. However, his deceased family have begun appearing outside of their programmed settings. Is it a technical fault, a delusion, or could something have survived beyond death?
A very effective little mystery based around a touching exploration of grief. This might have been a better tale to have read in December rather than when we are reaching the full bloom of summer. One I will have to remember to revisit towards the end of 1970.
Four Stars
Death and the Sensperience Poet by Joseph Green
Alistair McAlistair was a Sensperience Poet (creators of sensory experiences for humans to relax to) of some success. However, after his wife Carolyn killed herself, he found himself unable to create anything. As such he signed up for a tour of space. On the planet Achernar, crew members begin mysteriously disappearing, whilst Alistair starts to see visions of Carolyn.
There are a number of similarities here to the previous story, but there are also enough differences that they actually work well together as companion pieces. They both explore grief but whilst Elliot has trapped himself in a cycle of memory, Alistair is trying to live again.
Four Stars
Two Rivers by R. W. Mackelworth
For five generations people have lived in a utopian agricultural life inside the dome. An automated power plant and factory the only interruptions to this pastoral idyll. Outside a deadly airborne virus had raged and kept the community in isolation. Jon is now to be among first to leave for a hundred years to assess the world beyond its protection. But his older brother Bruno who leads the expedition knows a series of secrets that will change all their lives.
This is a very evocative tale, with something of Blackwood’s The Willows about it. And whilst it is not always entirely surprising, it had enough original elements to keep me intrigued throughout.
A high four stars
The Hero by Ernest Hill
Aston Wainwright was injured in the crash of the Daedalus II, proclaimed Hero of the Western World and given a series of commendations and medals. But this is small comfort forty-two years later when he is just another blind arthritic beggar on the streets.
German Veteran on the streets in 1923
This is a depressing but unfortunately ever-relevant story of how heroes of one generation are soon discarded by the next. In my own youth I recall the homeless former soldiers of the Great War on the streets of London, and I have no doubt that, in another generation, injured Vietnam veterans will be all over America. So it is honestly not hard to imagine Neil Armstrong in the year 2000 injured in a plane crash and living in poverty. At only 8 pages it cannot go particularly in depth, but it still hits its mark.
Four Stars
The True Worth of Ruth Villiers by Michael G. Coney
Since 2012, Britain social services were replaced by a system of credit worthiness. If you want to access any state services such as medical, you will be granted a loan based on this that you will pay back from your salary once you are back to work. If the required loan exceeds your creditworthiness plus personal savings, you will be ineligible. Friends or family helping each other out in these situations is a punishable offence.
Six months ago, Mr. Archer was happy in his role evaluating people’s credit worthiness for the Department of Social Value. That is until he has to assess Ruth Villiers who has fallen down an abandoned mineshaft. At every step it seems that being able to save her is just out of reach but neither is her credit low enough to completely abandon her. What are they to do?
It is an interesting take on the facelessness of bureaucracies. In some ways it feels like it fits into the mold of Asimov’s Robot Stories, where you take a system that appears solid and then explore how it can fail in edge cases. Not astounding but a reasonable way to finish things off.
A high three stars
So, it is a slow start for England, but they rallied in the middle to show a performance they can be proud of. But how will their Soviet counterparts fare?
Vortex: New Soviet Science Fiction
Introduction: At the Frontier of the Present Age by Ariadne Gromova
After a short preface by the editor, Gromova gives us a 20 page essay on the relationship between science and art, mass psychology, the scientific method and how “Nauchnaya Fantastika” looks in the USSR. Amazingly it doesn’t ramble and is one I will think on for a while.
Five Stars, along with a sense of disappointment none of her fiction appears in this collection.
The Time Scale by Alexander Abramov and Sergei Abramov
Wačlaw, a journalist at UNO meets with Leszczyski, former Princeton professor known for his discredited theory of discreet time. He shows Wačlaw a device that proves his theories are true, one that allows for a person to jump between different parallel times to decide which take they wish to use. This proves useful for Wačlaw, as he soon finds himself in the midst of a battle between two opposing factions.
This is the kind of thriller that does not particularly appeal to me, but I will admit it is well structured and I like the way it made use of time travel and different realities to add to the tension.
Three Stars for me; maybe add one more if you enjoy James Bond.
Futility by Andrei Gorbovskii
Space traders arrive at the planet Earth to discover it has no evidence of advanced civilization. Captain believes they must have degraded and disappeared, whilst Vamp thinks they may be looking in the wrong places.
A reasonable vignette about how our own biases may be inhibiting the search of extra-terrestrial intelligence. I do wonder how an alien species knows how to play draughts though….
Three Stars
(As a side note, in this translation they have chosen to render the Cyrillic ий as ii as opposed to the more common y, so if some familiar names look a little different, this may be why)
The Test by Artur Mirer
A giant automated factory is created to produce napalm for the army. To oversee the operation an artificial brain is installed. However, it decides it would much rather create jam and its resists all attempts to turn it off. A human named Philip is brought in by the robotic control centre, in the hopes he can help learn how to make more of its kind.
Whilst the portions with Philip were less interesting than I had hoped, I was utterly charmed by the concept of the story: that an intelligence would decide that it didn’t want to be a killer and would choose to make a sweet treat instead.
Three Stars
The Old Road by Artur Mirer
This story continues on from his previous instalment. Philip is now travelling with his pregnant wife Maria along the transcontinental highways, looking for a Doctor to assist in the birth. To his surprise he finds himself back at the artificial jam factory. The centre is extremely insistent on helping with the birth but not every part of the building seems to agree.
Regular readers will know I do not tend to connect as much with car-based tales as others do, so this may be part of why I felt less interested in this sequel. However, I also think that once you get past the initial cute concept, it becomes a bit of a standard tale of robot logic. Not something that is particularly original or memorable.
Two Stars
The Silent Procession by Boris Smagin
Herman and Andrei were once great friends but fell out due to differences of opinion. Andrei receives a letter from Herman asking him to come visit him quickly. What could this be about?
This is an odd vignette. The concept is something right out of the 30s, but the style is closer to that of a fairy tale.
Three Stars
He Will Wake in Two Hundred Years by Andrei Gorbovskii
Andrei believes he is destined for more than organising dictionaries, so decides to freeze himself for 200 years
Yes, this is another Sleeper Wakes style tale, albeit one with a bit more of a comic lean than most. Reasonable but forgettable.
A Low Three Stars
The Second Martian Invasion by Arkadii Strugatskii and Boris Strugatskii
Easily the largest story in this collection. This novella by the already famous brothers concerns Mr. Apollo who observes from his small town a possible major disaster happening over the horizon. However, he concludes the most logical response is to stay in their isolated settlement and get on with their lives. As such, whilst the bigger cities are being levelled by Martians, we get a glimpse of small town life at a time like this, such as debates over the use of stadium building funds and the creation of new stamps.
What really appeals to me is the cynicism of the narrator and the whole silliness with which events proceed. If you had told me this was actually a Brian Aldiss tale, I would have believed you.
A Solid Four Stars
Will the World Beaters Defeat the People’s Champions?
Soviet & English World Cup squads
The scores of these two publications are so close together, I will call the whole thing a draw. New Writings was more mixed whilst Vortex performed reasonably well throughout.
Whatever happens it definitely seems that the country has caught World Cup fever, where the events in Mexico will be dissected in every public house and I will be hearing Back Home blaring out of every radio for the foreseeable future.
[New to the Journey? Read this for a brief introduction!]