Read Galaxy's Edge Magazine: Issue 7: March 2014 Online

Authors: Mike Resnick;C. J. Cherryh;Steve Cameron;Robert Sheckley;Martin L. Shoemaker;Mercedes Lackey;Lou J. Berger;Elizabeth Bear;Brad R. Torgersen;Robert T. Jeschonek;Alexei Panshin;Gregory Benford;Barry Malzberg;Paul Cook;L. Sprague de Camp

Tags: #Darker Matter, #strange horizons, #Speculative Fiction, #Lightspeed, #Asimovs, #Locus, #Clarkesworld, #Analog

Galaxy's Edge Magazine: Issue 7: March 2014

 

GALAXY’S EDGE MAGAZINE    ISSUE 7: MARCH 2014

 

Mike Resnick, Editor

Shahid Mahmud, Publisher

 

Published by Arc Manor/Phoenix Pick

P.O. Box 10339

Rockville, MD 20849-0339

 

Galaxy’s Edge
is published every two months: March, May, July, September, November & January

 

www.GalaxysEdge.com

 

Galaxy’s Edge
is an invitation-only magazine. We do not accept unsolicited manuscripts. Unsolicited manuscripts
will be disposed of or mailed back to the sender (unopened) at our discretion.

 

All material is either copyright
©
2014
by Arc Manor LLC, Rockville MD, or copyright
©
by the respective authors as indicated within the magazine.
All rights reserved.

 

This magazine (or any portion of it) may not be copied or reproduced, in whole or in part, by any means, electronic, mechanical or otherwise without written permission from the publisher except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.

 

Each issue of
Galaxy’s Edge
is issued as a stand-alone book with a separate ISBN and may be purchased at wholesale venues dedicated to books sales (e.g., Ingram) or directly from the publisher.

 

ISBN (Digital):
 
 
 
 
978-1-61242-187-2
  
ISBN (Paper):  
 
 
 
978-1-61242-186-5

 

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CONTENTS

 

THE EDITOR’S WORD by Mike Resnick

CASSANDRA by C.J. Cherryh

HOLLAND: 1944 by Steve Cameron

CORDLE TO ONION TO CARROT by Robert Sheckley

PALLBEARERS by Martin L. Shoemaker

WEREHUNTER by Mercedes Lackey

THE TOUR GUIDE by Lou J. Berger

FASTER GUN by Elizabeth Bear

THE NECHRONOMATOR by Brad R. Torgersen

I
N A GREEN DRESS, SURROUNDED BY
EXPLODING CLOWNS by Robert T. Jeschonek

ONE SUNDAY IN NEPTUNE by Alexei Panshin

EXCEPT FOR THE PLUMBING by Gregory
Benford
(column)

FROM THE HEART’S BASEMENT by Barry Malzberg

BOOK REVIEWS by Paul Cook

SERIALIZATION:
Lest Darkness
Fall
  by
L. Sprague de Camp
             

THE EDITOR’S WORD
by
Mike Resnick

.

.

Welcome to the seventh issue of
Galaxy’s Edge
, which is now officially one year old. We’ve got the usual mixture of old and new for you, with reprints you may have missed by C. J. Cherryh, Elizabeth Bear, Robert Sheckley, Mercedes Lackey and Alexei Panshin, and new stories by new and newer writers Brad Torgersen, Martin Shoemaker, Steve Cameron, Lou J. Berger and Robert Jeschonek. We have the usual science column by Gregory Benford, the usual Book Review column by Paul Cook, and the usual an
y
thing-he-feels-like-writing-about column by Barry Malzberg. And starting with this issue, we’ll be seria
l
izing L. Sprague de Camp’s classic novel,
Lest Darkness Fall
. So dig in and help us celebrate our birthday.

***

Over the past century, the giants of science fiction have occasionally written a line or two that somehow survives them and their work, and is eventually viewed by most members of the field as a Revealed Truth.

Being a natural-born cynic (well, Caesarian actually, but let it pass), I’m here to tell you that
Truth,
r
e
vealed or otherwise, never set anyone free. It is Doubt that sets people free.

You think not? Let’s examine some of these truths that science fiction readers and writers seem to think are immutable.

And let’s start with one that even non-science-fiction people like to quote: Isaac Asimov’s First Law of Robotics, which states that a robot cannot harm a human being, or through inaction
allow
harm to come to a human being.

Sounds sensible.
Of course we’ll build that into every robot we ever make. Everyone knows that.

Uh … well, maybe not quite everyone. Seems to me that in 1991, the entire world saw a smart bomb, which is nothing but a robot in other-than-humanoid form, find its way down an Iraqi chimney. In 2003, we saw the Navy fire a smart bomb into the air while at sea, and the bomb, using its (non-positronic) brain, found its target 450 miles away.

So much for First Law.

Then there’s TANSTAAFL—the war cry of fans in the 1960s and 1970s, which was Robert A. Heinlein’s acronym for “There ain’t no such thing as a free lunch,” a battle cry voiced in
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
.

But of course it’s ridiculous. There are free lunch programs all the hell over. Check your local school. Or look at New York, where
former
Mayor Michael Bloomberg has proposed not only free lunches, but cash payments to poor people who don’t break the law, to parents who actually read their kids’ report cards, to kids who obey the law by attending school, and so on.

If there ain’t no such thing as a free lunch, it’s only because it’s been surpassed by a couple of hundred more lucrative free things.

Okay, let’s go back to one of the fathers of science fiction, H. G. Wells. Wells explained, time and again,
that the proper way to write science fiction was to take one, and only one, scientific breakthrough and write a story around it, that the public couldn’t possibly buy more than one a book.

Sounds logical … but it’s
dumb. It presupposes that the 1950s public couldn’t deal with, say, jet planes, television, and the Salk polio vaccine at the same time, or that no 1990s novel proposing space flight, cell phones, AIDS medications, and DVDs could be assimilated by the man (or reader) on the street.

And another revealed truth bites the dust.

Sir Arthur C. Clarke states that “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” The only answer is: to whom? Not to the people who create it. Not to the people who apply it. Not to all the people who benefit from it. (I love the late George Alec Effinger’s response to reading about fas
t
er-than-light drives and zap guns and all the other tropes of science fiction that some misguided authors feel they must explain, at length, in their stories: “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from doubletalk.”)

Then there’s Damon Knight’s classic definition of science fiction: “Science fiction is what I’m pointing at when I say ‘That’s science fiction.’”
Witty as all get-out.
Great line at parties.
But I’ve been hearing it quoted as something meaningful for more than four decades now. Let’s try an experiment: substitute the word “Jabberwocky” or any other nonsense word of your choice. Seems just as brilliant (and just an u
n
informative), doesn’t it?

And there’s Robert E. Howard’s classic and oft-quoted line (though of course Nietzsche said it first): “That which does not kill us makes us stronger.” Sure sounds good. But maybe you should ask a quadr
i
plegic car crash survivor, or someone who’s just lost a lung and a kidney to cancer, if they think they’re any stronger because of what didn’t kill them.

Sturgeon’s Law—“90% of everything is crap”—is so famous that even the
New York Times
has quoted it. I’d have no problem with it if it were limited to television, rock music, and Windows 8, but it’s all-inclusive, and your brain would surely qualify for Sturgeon’s 90% if you believed 90% of all medical and technological breakthroughs (or issues of
Galaxy’s Edge
, for that matter) were crap.

Back to Isaac Asimov, whose second most famous statement is “Violence is the last resort of the i
n
competent.”
Which may very well be true, but doesn’t acknowledge the far more meaningful corollary, which is that the competent don’t wait that long.

I’m sure you can think of more of science fiction’s Revealed Falsehoods and Half-Truths, but you get the idea. Even in a field as cerebral and forward-looking as ours, we pay lip service to a lot of lines that sound brilliant but hold about as much water as a sieve.

So the next time someone comes up to you and proves how brilliant we are by quoting an unquestioned statement by one of our leading lights, make sure you’re within reach of the saltcellar, because you’re going to have to take what they tell you with quite a few grains of sodium chloride.

.

.

*************************

C. J. Cherryh is the author of more than 50 novels, has won three Hugos, a Campbell, the Edward E. Smith Memorial Award, and has been a Worldcon Guest of Honor. “Cassandra” won the 1979 Hugo for Best Short Story.

 

CASSANDRA
by
C.J. Cherryh

.

.

F
ires.

They grew unbearable here.

Alis felt for the door of the flat and knew that it would be solid. She could feel the cool metal of the knob amid the flames … saw the shadow-stairs through the roiling smoke outside, clearly enough to feel her way down them, convincing her senses that they would bear her weight.

Crazy Alis.
She made no haste. The fires burned steadily. She passed through them, descended the i
n
substantial steps to the solid ground—she could not abide the elevator, that closed space with the sha
d
ow-floor, that plummeted down and down; she made the ground floor, averted her eyes from the red, heatless flames.

A ghost said good morning to her … old man Willis, thin and transparent against the leaping flames. She blinked, bade it good morning in return—did not miss old Willis’s shake of the head as she opened the door and left. Noon traffic passed, heedless of the flames, the hulks that blazed in the street, the tumbling brick.

The apartment caved in—black bricks falling into the inferno, Hell amid the green, ghostly trees. Old Willis fled, burning, fell—turned to jerking, blackened flesh—died, daily. Alis no longer cried, hardly flinched. She ignored the horror spilling about her, forced her way through crumbling brick that held no substance, past busy ghosts that could not be troubled in their haste.

Kingsley’s Cafe stood, whole, more so than the rest. It was refuge for the afternoon, a feeling of safety. She pushed open the door, heard the tinkle of a lost bell. Shadowy patrons looked, whispered.

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