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Overview

Piers Anthony presents a compendium of the Golden Age science fiction classics that inspired his astonishing career—timeless tales by Isaac Asimov, Jack Williamson, Walter M. Miller Jr., and other early SF masters

When Piers Anthony was thirteen years old, he picked up a copy of Astounding Science Fiction magazine, and his life changed forever. These breathtaking stories of space exploration and remarkable technologies, of alien cultures and future dystopias blew his mind and set his imagination free. Now, after nearly two hundred novels and many New York Times bestsellers, one of the most creative minds in contemporary science fiction and fantasy returns to his roots, presenting the amazing tales that made him the writer he is today.

In One and Wonder, Anthony invites readers to experience the same amazing tales that moved him in his youth, beginning with the first science fiction story he ever read: Jack Williamson’s “The Equalizer,” in which the members of a space mission return to Earth after twenty years only to discover that the world they left is gone forever. Anthony continues on to Theodore Sturgeon’s disturbing tale of an alien virus that literally turns people inside out, Isaac Asimov’s fable of a dangerous automaton hiding among masses of seemingly identical but more-benign machines, and seven more prime examples of Golden Age speculative and fantasy fiction, as breathtakingly inventive and unforgettable today as when they first mesmerized a young Piers Anthony. 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781497662797
Publisher: Open Road Media
Publication date: 10/21/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 327
Sales rank: 744,065
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

About The Author
Piers Anthony has written dozens of bestselling science fiction and fantasy novels. Perhaps best known for his long-running Xanth series, many of which are New York Times bestsellers, he has also had great success with the Incarnations of Immortality series and the Cluster series, as well as Bio of a Space Tyrant and others. Much more information about Piers Anthony can be found at www.HiPiers.com.

Evan Filipek graduated from Miami University’s Western Program in 1999 with a bachelor of philosophy in interdisciplinary studies. He currently resides in Cleveland, Ohio.
Theodore Sturgeon (1918–1985) is considered one of the godfathers of contemporary science fiction and dark fantasy. The author of numerous acclaimed short stories and novels, among them the classics More Than Human, Venus Plus X, and To Marry Medusa, Sturgeon also wrote for television and holds among his credits two episodes of the original 1960s Star Trek series, for which he created the Vulcan mating ritual and the expression “Live long and prosper.” He is also credited as the inspiration for Kurt Vonnegut’s recurring fictional character Kilgore Trout. Sturgeon is the recipient of the Hugo Award, the Nebula Award, and the International Fantasy Award. In 2000, he was posthumously honored with a World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement. 
Piers Anthony is one of the world’s most popular fantasy writers, and a New York Times–bestselling author twenty-one times over. His Xanth novels have been read and loved by millions of readers around the world, and he daily receives letters from his devoted fans. In addition to the Xanth series, Anthony is the author of many other bestselling works. He lives in Inverness, Florida.
To list Isaac Asimov's honors, as to list his books, would be excessive. Let it simply be noted that Isaac Asimov was the most famous, most honored, most widely read, and most beloved science fiction author of all time. In his five decades as an author, he wrote more than four hundred books, won every award his readers and colleagues could contrive to give him, and provided pleasure and insight to millions. He died in 1992, still at work.

Read an Excerpt

One and Wonder

Piers Anthony's Remembered Stories


By Evan Filipek, Jim Agpalza

OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA

Copyright © 2013 Jim Agpalza
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4976-6279-7



CHAPTER 1

Interstellar Task Force One was earthward bound, from twenty years at space. Operation Tyler was complete. We had circled Barstow's Dark Star, nearly a light-year from the Sun. The six enormous cruisers were burdened, now, with a precious and deadly cargo—on the frigid planets of the Dark Star we had toiled eight years, mining raw uranium, building atomic plants, filling the cadmium safety-drums with terrible plutonium.

We had left earth in a blare of bands and party oratory. Heroes of the people, we were setting out to trade our youth for the scarce fuel-metals that were the life-blood of the Squaredeal Machine. We were decelerating toward the Dark Star when Jim Cameron happened upon the somehow uncensored fact that both uranium and thorium are actually fairly plentiful on the planets at home, and concluded that we are not expected to return.

Allowed to test the cadmium safety-drums that we had brought to contain our refined plutonium, he found that some of them were not safe. One in each hundred—plated to look exactly like the rest—was a useless alloy that absorbed no neutrons. Stacked together in our hold, those dummy drums would have made each loaded ship a director-sized atomic bomb, fused with an unshielded critical mass of plutonium.

If Jim had been a Squaredealer, he might have got a medal. As a civilian feather merchant, he was allowed to scrap the deadly drums. Under party supervision, he was permitted to serve as safety inspector until the last tested drum was loaded in our holds. He was even granted limited laboratory privileges, under Squaredeal surveillance, until we were nearly home.

But he and I, aboard the Great Director, spent the last months of our homeward flight in the ship's prison. Held on charges never clearly stated, we somehow survived that efficient, antiseptic SBI equivalent of torture called "intensive interrogation." Our release, like the arrest, was stunningly unexpected.

"Okay, you guys." In the prison hospital, a bored guard shook us out of exhausted sleep. "Come alive, now. You're sprung. Get yourselves cleaned up—Hudd wants to see you."

Returning our clean laboratory whites, he unlocked the shower room. The prison barber shaved us. We signed a receipt for our personal belongings and finally stumbled out of the sound-proof cell-block where I had expected to die. There were no explanations and no regrets—the Special Bureau of Investigation was not emotional.

An MP sergeant was waiting.

"Come along, you guys." He pointed his stick at the officers' elevator. "Mr. Hudd wants to see you."

"Surprising," murmured Cameron.

Mr. Julian Hudd was not an officer. He had no formal connection with either the SBI or the Atomic Service. He was merely a special secretary to the Squaredeal Machine. As such, however, he gave orders to the admiral-generals. Hudd, the rumors said, was the bastard son of Director Tyler, who had sent him out to the Dark Star because he was becoming too dangerous at home. The imitation safety-drums, the rumors added, had been intended to keep him from returning. But Hudd, enjoying himself in a secret harem installed on his private deck, the rumors went on, meant to be hard to kill.

Julian Hudd rose to receive us in the huge mahogany-and-gold office beyond. At fifty, he was still handsome; he still bore a shaggy, dark-haired magnificence. Yet the enormous animal vitality of his heavy frame was visibly ailing. He was paunchy; his blue cheeks sagged into jowls; dark pouches hung under his blood-shot eyes.

"Jim! And Chad!" We were not his friends—a Squaredealer had no friends; but he made a fetish of informality. He shook our hands, seated us, and offered the first cigars I had seen in many years. "How are you?" Cameron's lean face turned sardonic.

"We have no scars or mutilations, thank you." Hudd nodded, beaming as genially as if he hadn't heard the sarcasm. Relaxed behind his opulent desk, he began tapping its sleek top with a paperweight, a small gold bust of Tyler.

"You two men are pariahs." He kept his smile of bland good-nature, but his voice became taut, violent. "Civilian scientists! Your own mutinous indiscretions got you into the cells of the SBI. Except for this present emergency, I should gladly let you rot there. Now, however, I'm going to let you exonerate yourselves—if you can."

The sagging, furrowed mask of his face gave me no hint about the nature or extent of this present emergency, and we had been incommunicado in the prison. By now, I thought, we must be near the earth. I recalled the booby drums. Perhaps, it occurred to me, he intended to take over the Directorate from Tyler or his heirs.

Hudd's gray, blood-shot eyes looked at me, disconcertingly.

"I know you, Chad Barstow." His fixed smile had no meaning, and his loud voice was a slashing denunciation. "Perhaps your own record is clean enough, but you are damned by a traitors name."

I wanted to protest that my father had been no traitor, but a patriot. For Dr. Dane Barstow had been Secretary of Atomics, in Tyler's first cabinet—when Tyler was only President of the United States. He had organized the Atomic Service, from the older armed services, to defend democracy. When he learned Tyler's dreams of conquest and autocratic power, he angrily resigned. That was the beginning of his treason.

In political disgrace, my father returned to pure science. He went out, with his bride, to found Letronne Observatory on the moon. Spending the war years there together, they discovered the Dark Star—my father first inferred the existence of some massive nonluminous body from minute perturbations of Pluto's orbit, and my mother aided him in the long task of determining its position and parallax with infrared photography.

Eagerly, Dane Barstow planned a voyage of his own to the Dark Star—he wanted, no doubt, to escape the oppressive intellectual atmosphere of the Directorate. He spent two years designing an improved ion-drive, and then tried to find aid to launch his expedition.

Tyler, meantime, had betrayed democracy and destroyed his rival dictators. From Americania, his splendid new capital, he domineered mankind. He was pouring billions into Fort America, on the moon, to secure his uneasy Directorate. He was not interested in the advancement of science.

Curtly, Tyler refused to finance or even to approve the Dark Star Expedition. He wanted the ion-drive, however, for the robot-guided atomic missiles of Fort America. My father quarreled with him, unwisely, and vanished into the labor camps of the SBI. My mother died in the care of a Square deal doctor.

Though I was only a little child, there are things I shall never forget. The sadness of my father's hollow-cheeked face. The intense, electric vitality of his eyes. The futile efforts of my mother to hide her fear and grief from me. The terror of the SBI, that haunted my sleep.

Five years old, I was taken into the Tyler Scouts.

Task Force One, which put to space three years later, was not the supreme scientific effort of my father's planning. The great expedition, as Jim Cameron once commented, was merely a moral equivalent of war.

"Dictators need an outside interest, to divert rebellion." A tall man, brown and spare, Cameron had looked thoughtfully at me across his little induction furnace—we were working together then in his shipboard laboratory. "War's the best thing—but Tyler had run out of enemies. That's why he had to conquer interstellar space."

I looked uneasily about for possible eavesdroppers, for such talk was not healthy.

"I wonder how it worked." Cameron gave me his likeable, quizzical grin. "Since we have failed to find any interstellar enemies, the essential factor was missing—there was no common danger, to make oppression seem the lesser evil. Perhaps it failed!"

Our arrest must have come from such reckless remarks as that. Cameron had always been unwisely free of speech, and it turned out that one of our laboratory assistants had been a Squaredealer, reporting every unguarded word to the SBI.

Now, in that richly paneled office, Julian Hudd kept drumming nervously on his sleek mahogany desk. Through that bland and mask-like smile, he watched me with red, troubled eyes.

Hoarsely, I answered him.

"I know my father was a traitor, Mr. Hudd." I had learned to utter those bitter words while I was still a child in the Tyler Scouts, for they had been the high price of survival. "But I've been loyal," I protested. "The SBI have nothing on me."

"You're lucky, Barstow." His voice was flat and merciless. "One word of real evidence would have drummed you through the execution valve. Now, I'm giving you a chance to redeem your father's evil name."

Then he turned upon Jim Cameron, accusingly. A sharp unease took hold of me, for Cameron had never been broken to mute obedience, as I had been. Now, emaciated and weary as he was from the prison, he still stood proud and straight. His fine blue eyes met Hudd's—sardonic, amused, and unafraid.

Jim Cameron had always been that way—meeting the iron might of regimented society with a cool, critical intelligence; yielding, sometimes, an ironic show of respect, but never surrendering his proud independence.

He had been my best friend since we came aboard the Great Director—two, among the thousands of Tyler Scouts who were sent to provide youthful replacements for the crews. He was fourteen then, the leader of our troop. He found me lying on my back, sick with acceleration-pressure, homesick, too, dazed and hopeless.

"Hello, Scout." He put a friendly hand on my shoulder and gave me his wry, invincible grin. "Let's get our gear policed up for inspection."

We arranged our equipment. He sent me for a brush to sweep under our bunks. I showed him the treasures in my pocket—three model-planet marbles, a broken gyroscope top, and a real oak-acorn—and even let him see the contraband snapshot of my parents. We went to chow together. We were friends.

Now, under the provocation of Hudd's shaggy-browed, glaring vehemence, I was afraid that Cameron's stubborn self-respect would once again get the better of his judgment.

"As for you, Jim—" Hudd's blue-jowled smile was wide, his voice harsh and violent—"your record is bad. You were broken from the Tyler Scouts, for insubordination. You were blackballed from the Machine, for doubtful loyalty. You were even rejected for the Atomic Service."

"That's true, Mr. Hudd." Cameron grinned, cool and aloof.

"Feather merchant!" Hudd's red eyes glared through his mechanical smile. "The execution valve is waiting for you, Jim. Never forget that. I've saved your life a dozen times—just because you've been useful to me. Now I'm giving you a chance to earn one more reprieve. But the valve's still waiting, if you fail. Understand?"

"Perfectly." Cameron grinned. "What's the job, this time?"

He must have been thinking of those dummy drums that he had found in time to save all our lives. Perhaps he was thinking of other services, too. On the cold worlds of the Dark Star, he had been a very useful man. He had invented sensitive new detectors to find the uranium hidden under glaciers of frozen air. He had solved a hundred deadly riddles for Hudd, before the last lethal cylinder of newly made plutonium was loaded safely aboard.

"One question, first." Hudd's big mouth still smiled, but his red eyes were narrowed and dangerous. "The boys have brought me a rather disturbing report about some gadget you called an induction furnace. What's the truth about it?" "That's easy, Mr. Hudd." Cameron's low voice seemed relieved. "Until our arrest, we were running routine assays of our metallurgical specimens from the Dark Star system. I built that little furnace just for convenience in fusing samples."

"So? Hudd forgot to smile. His heavy, mottled face stiffened into a bleak mask of ruthless purpose. "The boys report that your assays were only a blind, intended to cover some secret experiment."

Hudd paused, but Cameron said nothing. He merely stood waiting, his lean face grave enough, but an alarming hint of impersonal amusement in his eyes. Hudd went on:

"I believe it was a most peculiar furnace." Hudd's voice was harsh with accusation. "The boys report that it consumed no current. They say it changed the metals fused in it—that buttons of pure iron, on spectrographic analysis, began to show yellow sodium lines."

Hudd's great body heaved forward against the desk, ominously.

"What about that?"

Cameron nodded easily. Then fear dropped like a staggering burden upon me. For he grinned across the gleaming mahogany, and told Hudd more than he had ever admitted to the SBI, in all our months of intensive interrogation. "I was looking for something."

For a moment, as he spoke, Cameron let down the shield of reserved and sardonic amusement that he carried against a world of totalitarian compulsion. For a moment his voice had a hard elation, terrible in its honesty.

"I was looking for—freedom." His thin shoulders lifted, almost defiantly. "I thought I had found a new and simple technique for manipulating the cosmic stuff that sometimes we call matter and sometimes energy. I thought I had found the way out of the Atomic Age."

His blue and deep-set eyes, for just that moment, held a stern radiance. Then his brief elation flowed away. His tall, emaciated frame bent to a burden of failure, and I saw the gray sickness of the prison on his haggard face.

"I was mistaken." His voice went flat, with the dull admission of defeat. "The accidental contamination of pure specimens with spectroscopic traces of sodium is notoriously easy. I had already abandoned the experiment, before we were arrested."

Hudd nodded his great shaggy head, unsurprised. "You're smart to tell the truth—and lucky that you failed." His broad, blue-jowled face recovered its habitual political smile. "Now, I think you've had a lesson, Jim, and I'm going to give you another chance." His voice turned savage again. "I don't mean another chance at treason—for you'll be watched, every minute."

Cameron stood waiting. The defeated look was gone. His lean face was properly grave, but his keen blue eyes had a glint of amused expectancy.

"What's your trouble, Mr. Hudd?"

Hudd pushed the little golden head of Tyler away from him, across the opulent desk. Slowly shifting his great bulk, he leaned back in his wide chair, knitting his fingers so that his huge, black- haired hands cradled his paunch. Under the dark thick brows, his small eyes were red with fatigue and trouble.

"I suppose you noticed when we went from acceleration thrust to centrifugal, three days ago?" His rasping voice was dry and hurried. "Anyhow, we're back—on a temporary orbit twenty thousand miles from the moon."

"And something's wrong?" Cameron's voice, it seemed to me, had some faint undertone of malicious anticipation. But Hudd didn't seem to notice, for he was stating gravely:

"Something has happened to the Directorate!"

"Eh?" Cameron's veiled amusement vanished. "What?"

"Here are the facts." Heavily, Hudd lurched forward against the desk again; his voice had a brittle snap. "We began calling Fort America weeks ago, from millions of miles at space. Our signals weren't answered. So far as we can determine, the moon has been abandoned."

His bloodshot eyes looked haunted.

"We haven't tried to signal the earth—I want to keep the advantage of surprise, until we know the situation. But things have happened, even there."

He reached, with a huge and hairy paw, for the little golden bust of Tyler and resumed his nervous drumming.

"But we've been listening, on every possible wave band. Of course, out here, we couldn't expect to get much. But we are in range of the great television propaganda stations of the Applied Semantics Authority—and they are dead. All we have picked up are feeble clicks and squeals—scrambled radiophone signals, apparently, which our engineers can't unscramble."

His lowered voice echoed a baffled unease.

"The telescopes give us several puzzling hints. The forests have grown, since we left—the spread of green into the deserts might almost indicate a general climatic change. The haze of smoke is gone from the old industrial areas. Where several cities used to be, in the tropics, we can find only green jungle."

"Very interesting," Cameron murmured.

"Two landing parties were sent to earth in life-craft," Hudd added grimly. "One was to land in Europe and the other in North America. Nothing has been heard from either, since they entered the ionosphere. They are twenty-four hours overdue."

The solemn, baffled hush of his voice gave me an uncomfortable chill. It would be a terrible and ironic thing I thought, if we had come back from our long exile to find our own human kind somehow destroyed.

Hudd blinked at Cameron with shrewd weary eyes.

"Now, I'm sending out another party." His voice turned decisive. "Captain Rory Doyle will be in command—under the advice of my liaison man, of course—and Doyle wants you two with him. You are taking off in two hours. Your first object will be to learn what happened to Fort America."

Hudd put his great hands flat on the desk and came laboriously to his feet, puffing with the effort. For all his gross bulk, however, he made a towering figure, dynamic and impressive still. Shrewd and imperious, his small eyes burned into Cameron.

"You had better find out." With a visible effort at control, he lowered his violent voice. "Your mission is important. I believe the Directorate has been overthrown, and I intend to restore it. I've got plutonium enough to smash the earth. The first necessity, however, is to learn what has happened. I believe you can anticipate the consequence to yourselves of failure."

"I think we can, Mr. Hudd," said Cameron.

My heart began to thump, with an excited and somewhat apprehensive expectation.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from One and Wonder by Evan Filipek, Jim Agpalza. Copyright © 2013 Jim Agpalza. Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction by Piers Anthony
  • The Equalizer by Jack Williamson
  • Breaking Point by James Gunn
  • Vengeance for Nikolai by Walter M. Miller, Jr.
  • The Girl had Guts by Theodore Sturgeon
  • The Little Lost Robot by Isaac Asimov
  • Child's Play by William Tenn
  • Ground Leave Incident by Rog Phillips
  • Dreams are Sacred by Peter Phillips
  • Wherever You May Be by James Gunn
  • Myrrha by Gary Jennings
  • Editor's Note by Evan Filipek
  • Piers Anthony: An Autobiographical Sketch
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