The Best of Amazing Stories the 1931 Anthology

The Best of Amazing Stories the 1931 Anthology - Jean Marie Stine

The Best of Amazing Stories the 1931 Anthology


1931 saw the U.S. and the rest of the world sunk low, despairing in the depths of the Great Depression. But there was rejoicing at Amazing Stories because all and all, story for story, 1931 was Amazing's best year ever. Among them, the now classic works we have chosen for this anthology: "Prima Donna 1980," a dazzling story of art, ambition, tragedy, business, television, and song, filled with very human characters, that inevitably reminds one of C.L. Moore's "No Woman Born." Written by Bernard Brown, a motion picture sound technician, Bleiler rates "Prima Donna 1980," as "one of the best stories" in the history of Amazing. Patrick Dutton's masterpiece of style, "The Beautiful Bacillus," a unique work straddling the line between humor and tragedy. Bleiler pronounced Dutton's story beautifully written in "a complex, tightly organized prose, handled with considerable grace and elegance"..."subtler than Lovecraft" and "certainly worth rereading, [it is] one of the few stories in early Amazing that deserved to be preserved." (but ironically it has never been reprinted until now). A. Hyatt Verrill's "The Exterminator," an O'Henryish short story which anthologist and critic Sam Moskowitz reports "immediately became one of the most popular stories of that length in the history of the magazine." One of David H. Keller MD's top-notcher satires that still remains relevant today, "Service First," an acid-tinged solution to rising rents (a problem even then), an aerial mobile home that only came down for refueling. "The Incredible Formula" by Paul Ernst, a tale of the chemically resurrected dead replacing workers in plants and fields across the U. S., also aspired to something more than the mere unfolding of a new scientific discovery, with its carefully crafted economic subtheme and with an "unusually cynical, unexpected end (Bleiler)." Raymond Z. Gallun's "The Lunar Chrysalis," about an intelligent mollusk civilization on the moon, a fleet of spaceships aimed at the Earth, a desperate attempt by two explorers to escape and warn the home world, and a surprise ending few readers of the time could have anticipated-"nicely told" writes Bleiler. Paul Bolton's "The Time Hoaxers," about which little can be said without giving too much away, except that nothing is what it seems at first or second glance, and the truth is only revealed in a final coda. Finally, Murray Leinster, who had been writing science fiction for more than a decade (and under his real name, Will F.
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1931 saw the U.S. and the rest of the world sunk low, despairing in the depths of the Great Depression. But there was rejoicing at Amazing Stories because all and all, story for story, 1931 was Amazing's best year ever. Among them, the now classic works we have chosen for this anthology: "Prima Donna 1980," a dazzling story of art, ambition, tragedy, business, television, and song, filled with very human characters, that inevitably reminds one of C.L. Moore's "No Woman Born." Written by Bernard Brown, a motion picture sound technician, Bleiler rates "Prima Donna 1980," as "one of the best stories" in the history of Amazing. Patrick Dutton's masterpiece of style, "The Beautiful Bacillus," a unique work straddling the line between humor and tragedy. Bleiler pronounced Dutton's story beautifully written in "a complex, tightly organized prose, handled with considerable grace and elegance"..."subtler than Lovecraft" and "certainly worth rereading, [it is] one of the few stories in early Amazing that deserved to be preserved." (but ironically it has never been reprinted until now). A. Hyatt Verrill's "The Exterminator," an O'Henryish short story which anthologist and critic Sam Moskowitz reports "immediately became one of the most popular stories of that length in the history of the magazine." One of David H. Keller MD's top-notcher satires that still remains relevant today, "Service First," an acid-tinged solution to rising rents (a problem even then), an aerial mobile home that only came down for refueling. "The Incredible Formula" by Paul Ernst, a tale of the chemically resurrected dead replacing workers in plants and fields across the U. S., also aspired to something more than the mere unfolding of a new scientific discovery, with its carefully crafted economic subtheme and with an "unusually cynical, unexpected end (Bleiler)." Raymond Z. Gallun's "The Lunar Chrysalis," about an intelligent mollusk civilization on the moon, a fleet of spaceships aimed at the Earth, a desperate attempt by two explorers to escape and warn the home world, and a surprise ending few readers of the time could have anticipated-"nicely told" writes Bleiler. Paul Bolton's "The Time Hoaxers," about which little can be said without giving too much away, except that nothing is what it seems at first or second glance, and the truth is only revealed in a final coda. Finally, Murray Leinster, who had been writing science fiction for more than a decade (and under his real name, Will F.
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