Which books/covers/authors in the post intrigue you? Which have you read? Disliked? Enjoyed?
1. The Alejandra Variations, Paul Cook (1984)

Jim Gurney’s cover for the 1st edition
From the back cover: “FIRST VARIATION
Nuclear Strategist Nicholas Tejada sees the end of the world.
SECOND VARIATION
One thousand years later, Nicholas wakes up in an underground civilization that lives only for drugs, sex, and thrills.
THIRD VARIATION
250,000 years in the future, Nicholas travels with a tribe of Amazons, who are constantly forced to migrate by walking nuclear bombs.
FOURTH VARIATION
One the day the sun dies, Nicholas faces the woman who has been pursuing him through a thousand thousand lifetimes…”
Initial Thoughts: First, I adore Jim Gurney’s cover (of Dinotopia fame). Unfortunately, my edition is a bit scuffed. Gurney is the master of the articulated leg. As for the Cook novel, this is the third one–after Duende Meadow (1985) and Titangel (1981)–I own but still haven’t read any of his work. Which of those three would you recommend I read first?
2. The Best of Poul Anderson, Poul Anderson (1976)

Mara McAfee’s cover for the 1st edition
From the inside page: “A traveler from the stars becomes the unwilling oracle for a Stone-Age people and the pawn in a primitive power struggle.
A disaffected sociologist discovers that each of his dreams for the perfect society contains the seed of a nightmare.
The War of Judgement has thrown mankind back into the Dark Ages, where the blue-eyed marauding Sky People and their victims face off in a struggle made desperate by the survival of twentieth-century technology.
Time travel provides one society with the perfect way to punish its criminals.”
Contents: “The Longest Voyage” (1960), “The Last of the Deliverers” (1958), “My Object All Sublime” (1961), “Kyrie” (1968), “The Fatal Fulfillment” (1970), “Hiding Place” (1961), “The Sky People” (1959).
Initial Thoughts: I’ve read and reviewed quite a few Poul Anderson novels and collections on the site in the early years. Some is basic adventure filler, some thought provoking, some downright frustrating (I’m looking at you Tau Zero). I’m always open to read more.
3. Future War, Jack Wodhams (1982)

Rowena Cory’s cover for the 1st edition
From the back cover: “FUTURE WAR takes you back to the world of the highly successful novella, ONE CLAY FOOT, which elicited widespread acclaim.”
Contents: “Butcher Mackerson” (1982), “United We Fall” (1982), “Pet” (1982), “Dead Heat” (1982)
Initial Thoughts: I’ve not read any of Wodhams’ fiction. The reviewers over at Galactic Journey seldom seem enamored (probably for good reason) with his work. I’m slowly accumulating the Void / Corry & Collins (Australian Science Fiction & Fantasy) volumes.
4. One By One, Penelope Gilliatt (1965)

Uncredited cover for the 1965 edition
From the inside flap: “The theme of Penelope Gilliatt’s exciting first novel is the conflict in a man between his compelling need for self-assertion and the assured happiness of his married life–a conflict brought to the surface by the outbreak in London of a deadly pestilence which reduces the city to a panic-stricken place of dying and the dead.
Joe Talbot’s life, before he married Polly, had been dominated by his invalid mother who had raised herself from penury to affluence and who sneers at her son’s acceptance of life as a vet. Now, at the novel’s opening, he must break to his pregnant wife the news of the outbreak of this disease which is defying diagnosis and of the fact that he has volunteered as a hospital orderly. Only gradually does Polly realize how profoundly in this crisis, where the hospital comes so vitally to need his services, his attitude to her is changing, how he is struggling to withdraw himself from her. He sends her to his mother in Eastbourne–is it for her safety or his peace of mind? When she returns with their child he insists that they go into an isolation hospital. Visiting her there he pretends at first that he is someone else. Breaking through his barriers she declares her love for him. It is her fatal mistake.
Penelope Gilliatt tells this story of the agony of two human beings with a sympathy that is never sentimental and with a masterly command of dialogue. Her descriptions of London in the grip of pestilence, and of the savagery of those living outside the restricted area of the city and suburbs towards those they suspect of being plague-barriers, are horrifying convincing. This is a strange and remarkable novel.
Penelope Gilliatt is dramatic critic of The Observer.”
Initial Thoughts: I learned about this unknown take on a SF theme by a non-genre author over at Brad Bigelow’s The Neglected Books Page. I wish I had the bizarre Panther edition he includes in his review.
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I am fond of Wodham’s “There is a Crooked Man” (which the Galactic Journeyers did not hate https://galacticjourney.org/january-31-1967-the-law-of-averages-february-1967-analog/). The surprising variety of ways that new technologies end up being used were clever and surprising.
Thank you for the link. I read all of their reviews but forgot that one!
I have forgotten Cook completely. Certainly never read him.
I have read very little Wodhams, and never thought that much about him, except as probably only the second Australian SF writer to get much notice, after Chandler.
Your assessment of Anderson’s ouevre is pretty much spot on. I like his work, on the whole — even the “basic adventure filler” is reliably enjoyable. This particular collection is — above average, I suppose. “The Longest Voyage” is good but seemed diminished on a recent reread. “Kyrie” is ambitious. The other stories are all pretty solid. But it doesn’t seem that it includes any of his true best stories.
I’ve read, and enjoyed, one Penelope Gilliatt novel, The Cutting Edge. In fact, inspired by your acquisition of One by One, I posted my long ago brief review of that book on my blog: https://rrhorton.blogspot.com/2024/09/resurrected-review-cutting-edge-by.html
I admit I had never heard of One by One.
Thank you for the link. I’ll check out the review. I know little about her.
I also imagine you might get to Paul Cook before me!
I have apparently read On the Rim of the Mandala and The Engines of Dawn by Paul Cook. I can’t remember anything about either of them – even reading the synopses for the books on Amazon doesn’t help. So, not very memorable then.
Well, if you’re inspired to track down one of his earlier works — let me know. Duende Meadow (1985) seems the most interesting to me.
‘One By One’ by Penelope Gilliatt has definitely caught my eye! I’m all about those themes of self-assertion and tension.
Well, if you get to it before me (as you probably will as I own so many unread SF books), let me know how it is. What types of science fiction do you enjoy?
• The Left Hand of Darkness
• Dune
• Neuromancer
• Brave New World
• Ender’s Game
All good stuff (well, I enjoyed Ender’s Game as a teen, not sure I would now).
Are you new to my site? I’ve been around for more than a decade and written hundreds and hundreds of reviews. The best place to get a sense of my more recent projects include my year-in-review posts. Here’s 2022 and 2023. My complete index of reviews by author rating can be found here.
And, I couldn’t help but mention it, my recent article on Clifford D. Simak and Organized Labor.