
(Uncredited—but looks like Paul Lehr—cover for the 1971 edition)
4.5/5 (Very Good)
“…I see no reason why we shouldn’t go to Mars in 1982…” Vice President of the U.S. July, 1969
Barry N. Malzberg’s fourth SF novel Universe Day (1971) is comprised of numerous previously published short stories as well as new material.* It might be best to think of the novel as a thematically linked sequence—in what might be termed a “future history” but unlike any you have ever read—of impressions and snippets of “what really happened” paired with what we want to happen or delude ourselves into thinking happened. All his major themes are on display, the space program as a manifestation of humankind’s delusions of grandeur, the dehumanizing power of technology, space as playground of existential nightmares, etc.
One of Malzberg’s most appealing qualities is the sheer variety of existential situations he conjures. Yes, many of the themes are repeated story to story (and novel to novel) but the black comedy elements are so often overlooked. The chapter/short story “Touching Venus, 1999” encapsulates Malzberg’s absurdist brilliance. In moments of metafictional delight, he acknowledges the artifice of the array of scenarios he constructs, the Continue reading








