
Science Fiction has always been concerned about the future. Over a 100 years ago, SF stories appeared that warned us that our planet was in danger. The most recognized story in this anthology is Alfred Bester’s classic, “Adam and No Eve.”
I also was familiar with Philip K. Dick’s “Survey Team” and Clifford D. Simak’s “Drop Dead” stories before I read Nature’s Warnings. I was surprised by Jack Sharkey’s “A Matter of Protocol,” a story I must have read in GALAXY in 1962 and then completely forgot about. It was great to re-read it. Richard McKenna is an underrated writer, but “Hunter, Come Home” shows why he should be better known. This story about a planet defending itself from humans is both moving and cautionary.
Elisabeth Sanxay Holding is best known for her mysteries, but “Shadow of Wings” shows she could create dread in SF stories, too. Margaret St. Clair’s “The Gardener” displays her talents as a gifted short story writer.
As with all these anthologies in The British Library Science Fiction series, Mike Ashley provides informative introductions and insights for each story. You can’t go wrong with a Mike Ashley anthology! GRADE: B+
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
INTRODUCTION by Mike Ashley
- Survey Team • (1954) • short story by Philip K. Dick
- The Dust of Death • [The Doom of London] • (1903) • short story by Fred M. White
- The Man Who Hated Flies • (1929) • short fiction by J. D. Beresford
- The Man Who Awoke • [The Man Who Awoke • • (1933) • novelette by Laurence Manning
- The Sterile Planet • novelette by Nat Schachner (variant of Sterile Planet (1937) [as by Nathan Schachner]
- Shadow of Wings • (1954) short fiction by Elisabeth Sanxay Holding [as by Elizabeth Sanxay Holding]
- The Gardener • (1949) • short story by Margaret St. Clair
- Drop Dead • (1956) • novelette by Clifford D. Simak
- A Matter of Protocol • [Contact] • (1962) • short story by Jack Sharkey
- Hunter, Come Home • (1963) • novelette by Richard McKenna
- Adam and No Eve • (1941) • short story by Alfred Bester










