WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #239: THE COLLECTOR’S BOOK OF SCIENCE FICTION Edited by David Stuart Davies

Just by chance, I stumbled upon David Suart Davies’s monumental The Collector’s Book of Science Fiction (aka, Wordsworth Book of Science Fiction) presents over a 1000 pages of classic 19th and early 20th Century SF. I own a 100 SF anthologies, but The Collector’s Book of Science Fiction contains a massive amount of material unavailable elsewhere.

Cast your eyes down the Table of Contents and prepare to be amazed at the breath of writers represented. Yes, Jules Verne, A. Conan Doyle, and Jack London are here, but Milne, Stockton, Allen show up, too.

After reading The Collector’s Book of Science Fiction, I developed a whole different sense of what was happening in early SF with little known writers like Weinbaum, Mitchell, White, and Griffith making substantial progress in the genre.

If you’re a devotee of early Science Fiction The Collector’s Book of Science Fiction is a must-read. I bought my copy of The Collector’s Book of Science Fiction for less than $10–a bargain for a book of this size and importance! GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

12 thoughts on “WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #239: THE COLLECTOR’S BOOK OF SCIENCE FICTION Edited by David Stuart Davies

  1. Byron

    Well this looks right up my alley. I’ll see if there are any copies floating around ebay. That cover though just hurts my eyes. It’s not only incongruous with the content but is so godawful it almost makes me a little less uncomfortable at the notion of some people losing their jobs to AI.

    Thanks for the tip!

    Reply
  2. Jerry House

    I’ve read many of the stories here, most of which — at the very least — deserve not to be forgotten. However, I fear that many of today’s readers will find them too slow and stodgy for their tastes.

    Reply
  3. Fred Blosser

    I haven’t seen this one, but Half Price Books used to carry Wordsworth volumes on the remainder table, mostly PD single-author horror collections. Affordable ($5) books of hard to find works. I imagine Jerry is right, slow go for today’s readers, on average, but maybe some will be amused to see where today’s genre evolved from.

    Reply
    1. Jerry House

      Fred, Davies (who passed away a year ago this month) was also the editor of many of those Wordsworth volumes. I found all of those edited by him to be worthwhile. He was also a noted Sherlockian and a mainstay of Britain’s Crime Writers’ Association.

      Reply
      1. george Post author

        Jerry, I’ve been impressed by Davies’ Sherlock Holmes pastiches. I didn’t know he also edited many of the Wordsworth volumes.

  4. Todd Mason

    And not every Weinbaum story is on par with “The Adaptive Ultimate”, much less “A Martian Odyssey”, which, even down to somewhat clunky dialogue jokes, nonetheless deservedly floored readers upon first publication (and is the initial story in the 1969 THE SCIENCE FICTION HALL OF FAME, V. 1, selected largely by a poll of SF Writers of America (as it was known then) members, with light policing by Robert Silverberg.

    I admit to being an insufficiently thorough scholar of works which interest me greatly, but while this is an interesting project, it’s definitely not the one I’d turn to first (but should look at it soon)…and FLATLAND and its sequel were never intended to be sf the way that Weinbaum’s Martian stories were, so much as an amusing way of combining social satire with geometry…

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Todd, as David Stuart Davies remarks in his INTRODUCTION, the stories in THE COLLECTOR’S BOOK OF SCIENCE FICTION show that many of the IDEAS that became central to SF appeared in many of these stories for the First Time.

      Reply

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