| Sad Story [2] | ||||||
| Science Fiction Monthly (August 1974) | ||||||
| Translated into German as: | ||||||
| 'Trauer' in Science Fiction Story Center 11 (1977) | ||||||
| Salomé [4] | ||||||
| The Dedalus Book of Femmes Fatales, Dedalus 1992 | ||||||
| ed. Brian Stableford | ||||||
| Salome & Other Decadent Fantasies, Cosmos Books 2004 | ||||||
|
|
I had high expectations of this one. After all, Salome is one of the worlds most notorious femme fetales, so youd expect a certain sexual frisson. (Im working here, gentle reader, on the assumption that sexual stimulation is permissible, as long as it is not exploitative.) As youd imagine, the story is set at the time of John the Baptist, though here hes called John the Prophet; a warning that - like The Hunger and Ecstasy of Vampires - this story features narrative devices who just happen to share the names of people featured in other writing. Salome was born with a talent for dancing, which inflames he father so much that tongues are cut out to safeguard her magical secret. Herod allows Salome to dance only for him and a select few, and in his fascination, Herod neglects his wife. As she develops, Salomes power grows and Herods fascination is only matched by Herodias jealousy Unfortunately, this story doesnt succeed. Theres no hint of the exoticism, which always adds excitement to sexual fantasies and Herods political strategy seems almost contemporary. Although Salomes gyrations are described as snakelike, theres little sense of tantalisation, because the girl is too remote from both the characters in the story and its readership. Disappointing,
Im afraid. |
|||||
| The Scream [8] | ||||||
| Asimov's Science Fiction (July 1994) | ||||||
| Translated into French as: | ||||||
| 'Le cri' in Galaxies 8 (03/1998) | ||||||
| Brian
hasn't written too many telepathy tales. Probably because 'the direct
connection of two nervous systems separated by time and space' is just
a bit too much to swallow. We simply don't have the hardware to either
send, receive or interpret the nerve impulses we'd swapped.
So how does Brian get around this insurmountable obstacle and write this story, you ask? Not telling, sorry. I do have a nondisclosure policy to uphold, but you know that in a story with this title, everything is not going to be hunky dory, don't you? Paul Scrivener plays a genetic scientist (Oh, oh! Better be careful I don't spill the beans ) and mean chess player, who lives quietly in the countryside. One evening, while lining up the local sheriff for defeat, the air is rent by a dreadful scream and Scrivener knows his past has returned to haunt him |
||||||
| Second Chance [4] | ||||||
| Pictures at an Exhibition, Greystoke Mowbray Ltd 1981 | ||||||
| ed. Ian Watson | ||||||
| Beyond the Boundaries 6 (Winter 1995) | ||||||
| After a nuclear holocaust has wiped out humanity,
God decides to remake Eden. He re - introduces Adam and Eve, but this
time round grants the primordial couple the sum of human wisdom, hoping
things will go better.
This is called asking for it. |
||||||
| The Secret Exhibition [12] | ||||||
| Weird Tales 317 (Fall 1999) | ||||||
| The Wayward Muse, Black Coat Press 2005 | ||||||
| Security [1] | ||||||
| Weekend Book of Science Fiction, Harmsworth 1981 | ||||||
| ed. S. Gendall | ||||||
| Western Mail 24 November 1979 | ||||||
| This story could well be the first thing of Brian's that I
ever read. I remember buying The Weekend Book of Science Fiction whilst
on holiday with my parents. It's also the earliest humorous story of
Brian's that I know of.
Hatherley visits the Department of Social Security in the hope of getting his AI program - Max - a social security number, because he figures that with one it would be easier to get him legal recognition and protection against being switched off. Short and sweet. |
||||||
| Seers [4] | ||||||
| Gothic Ghosts, Tor 1997 | ||||||
| ed. Wendy Webb & Charles Grant | ||||||
| Self-Sacrifice [5] (as Francis Amery) | ||||||
| Interzone 053 (November 1991) | ||||||
| The Dedalus Book of Femmes Fatales, Dedalus 1992 | ||||||
| ed. Brian Stableford | ||||||
| Translated into German as: | ||||||
| 'Selbstopferung' in Winterfliegen ed. Wolfgang Jeschke, Heyne 1999 | ||||||
| This
is another of Brians stories which explores the edge of sexual
mores and questionable morality. It really is an open question whether
its protagonist will inspire sympathy, disgust or both.
Self - Sacrifice begins with our hero searching for a whore, but not just any whore; she must be the right age and appearance for his little ritual. Finally, he finds a young girl long past naiveté, a drug addict who sells her body to finance her habit. The narrator of this story is a molecular biologist, whose daughter died some years before and for whom he felt unconsummated sexual desire. Part of his ritual is to slake this unnatural desire, part to confess his sins and the sins of his colleagues in their part in trying to save the world. Easily the best of the three Femmes Fetales stories. |
||||||
| The Serpent [6] | ||||||
| Interzone 099 (September 1995) | ||||||
| A harrowing story, which starts when a man who comes home
from work and finds that his wife has tried to kill their unborn baby.
Haunted by self-accusation and fearful of official meddling, he tries
to coax an explanation from his wife.
To say more about this would spoil it, so I'll stop here. |
||||||
| Sexual Chemistry [7] | ||||||
| Interzone 020 (Summer 1987) | ||||||
| Interzone: The Third Anthology, Simon & Schuster 1988 | ||||||
| ed. John Clute, David Pringle & Simon Ounsley | ||||||
| Interzone: The Third Anthology, NEL 1989 | ||||||
| ed. John Clute, David Pringle & Simon Ounsley | ||||||
| Sexual Chemistry, Simon & Schuster (UK) 1991 (as A Career in Sexual Chemistry) | ||||||
| Love is Strange, Indigo 1998 (as A Career in Sexual Chemistry) | ||||||
| ed. Richard Glyn Jones | ||||||
| The Hard SF Renaissance, Tor 2002 (as A Career in Sexual Chemistry) | ||||||
| ed. David G. Hartwell & Kathryn Cramer | ||||||
| This tale follows the life of Giovanni Casanova, the nerdy
son of an Italian immigrant and a nice working class mum.
Unable to attract the girls at school, Giovanni takes refuge in scientific study and becomes a bit of a prodigy; going on to university and eventually joining the research department of Cytotech Inc: a Californian biotech company, who set him to work on an aphrodisiac. The potion is an astounding success, but the young scientist is troubled by his sudden ability with women and his failure to fulfil them sexually, so he starts work on a stimulant to improve his performance. When these two developments plunge Cytotech and Giovanni into trouble, he has to return to his lab to find a solution. This is another of Brian's wise and witty short stories, which takes an old theme - the love potion - and reworks it in the light of both modern sensibilities and knowledge. |
||||||
| Sheena [25] | ||||||
| The Vampire Sextette, Ace 2002 | ||||||
| ed. Marvin Kaye | ||||||
| The Shepherd's Daughter [2] | ||||||
| Fear (September 1990) | ||||||
| Fables and Fantasies, Necronomicon Press 1996 | ||||||
| Magnus lives high in the mountains with his beloved
daughter, Hilda. When the kingdom is devasted by a disease, he hopes
like the other mountain folk, that the relative sparsness of the popuation
will protect him and Hilda from illness.
When Hilda is struck down, Magnus beseeches God and the angels to help him. When no help is forthcoming, he curses them and in desperation, turns to the host of Hell. He curses them too for their indifference, but they are not forgiving like the angels and visit a terrible vengance upon him. |
||||||
| The Singer of Dreams [2] | ||||||
| Proteus 2 (1966) | ||||||
| Skin Deep [8] | ||||||
| Amazing Stories (October 1991) | ||||||
| The story of Roy Orchisson, a cosmetic surgeon, who becomes
infatuated with Helena Wyngard: doyen of man-eaters and ultimate surgical
challenge, who is famous for leaving men's careers in tatters.
Melissa Sai had seen it all before, in fact she'd seen two or three of her protégés become entranced before doing a dying swan act and she was determined it wasn't going to happen to Roy. With dispiriting predictability, Roy falls for Helena's charms and ends up doing the ultimate face-job on her. Then Helena announces that she wants to leave Roy and he replies that he used special DNA when he operated. If he's not around her face will fall to pieces. Things then get a bit awkward for Helena when Roy is killed in a freak accident... |
||||||
| The Skin Trade [6] | ||||||
| Asimov's Science Fiction (November 1995) | ||||||
|
An amusing tale of love at first sight - or perhaps I should say, scent. Ritchie Halliday's tailor tells of his choosiest customer and his penchant for changing his clothes. Not that we're talking threads here, but skins. Genetically engineered skins, which envelop you, cosset you and live off the waste products excreted through your skin - the one you were born with, that is. Exactly why there should be an unlikely attraction between an interplaneary waldo operator and someone who works for a local 3V studio? That would be telling, wouldn't it? |
||||||
| Skinned Alive [2] | ||||||
| Weekend Fiction Extra September 1978 | ||||||
| Complications & Other Science Fiction Stories, Cosmos Books 2003 | ||||||
| Professor Birnam is desperately trying to stifle his embarrassment
at his arousal by the presence of a young journalist. Jennifer is beginning
to wish that when she came to interview the man who makes fur coats
grow on trees, she'd worn a longer skirt. Both of them have more to
worry about than they think.
Now for your morning exercises: Place tongue firmly in cheek... |
||||||
| The Sleeping Soul [v] | ||||||
| Fables and Fantasies, Necronomicon Press 1996 | ||||||
| Xhoris Alaquel has bestowed a favour upon Larissa, no one knows why. | ||||||
| Sleepwalker [1] | ||||||
| Interzone 105 (March 1996) | ||||||
| Wavelength 14 (June 1996) | ||||||
| Not a lot can be said about this one without giving too much
away.
An unnamed man agrees to have part of his brain temporarily disabled so that researchers can study the nature of human dreaming. Usually, the importance of dreams is played up, if not by mystics then by pshychologists. It's interesting to read a story where knowing your dreams might be considered a nuisance. |
||||||
| Slumming in Voodooland [7] | ||||||
| Pulphouse Short Story Paperback no. 26 (1991) | ||||||
| Translated into Czech as: | ||||||
| 'Výlet do Voodoolandu' in Ikarie (8/1996) | ||||||
|
||||||
| Snowball in Hell [12] | ||||||
| Analog (December 2000) | ||||||
| The Year's Best Science Fiction: Eighteenth Annual Collection, St Martin's Press | ||||||
| ed. Gardner Dozois | ||||||
| Designer Genes: Tales of the Biotech Revolution, Five Star 2004 | ||||||
| Stephen Hutchens is a scientific advisor to the Home Office,
which isn't a very exciting job; so when he gets the chance to assist
Special Branch when they raid and illegal laboratory, he jumps at it.
The raid begins and in his enthusiasm, Stephen runs way too fast and
is overcome by smoke when the scientists burn the laboratory to the
ground.
Hutchens wakes up in a dark cellar with a young woman and so begins an examination into what makes a human human. This is a must-have story, when you see it, buy it. Another review can be found on Tangent. |
||||||
| Sortilege and Serendipity [12] | ||||||
| Eurotemps, Roc 1992 | ||||||
| ed. Neil Gaiman & Alex Stewart | ||||||
| Complications & Other Science Fiction Stories, Cosmos Books 2003 | ||||||
| The second story featuring Simon Sweetland and Carol Cloxeter,
finds them involved with Interpol after returning from a symposium on
paranormality in Paris.
This time a young boy, who can pinpoint the location of anyone who used a particular telephone, is in demand; because someone has stolen rather a lot of money... |
||||||
| Story with a Happy Ending [2] | ||||||
| Science Fiction Monthly (June 1974) | ||||||
| The Storyteller's Tale [3] | ||||||
| The Anthology of Fantasy and the Supernatural, Tiger 1994 | ||||||
| ed. Stephen Jones & David Sutton | ||||||
| The Giant Book of Fantasy and the Supernatural, Parragon 1996 | ||||||
| ed. Stephen Jones & David Sutton | ||||||
| Salome & Other Decadent Fantasies, Cosmos Books 2004 | ||||||
|
If
you go down to the waste today, If
you go down to the waste today, The
Withering Waste is no place to haste Whatever
you do, |
||||||
| The Sun's Tears [5] | ||||||
| Amazing (October 1974) | ||||||
| World's Best SF: 1975, DAW 1975 | ||||||
| ed. Donald A. Wollheim | ||||||
| Translated into Spanish as: | ||||||
| 'Las L grimas del Sol' in Nueva Dimension 111 (04/1979) | ||||||
| Set in the same universe as An Offer of Oblivion
and sharing the Starman's Quest as a theme, this is somewhat better.
It involves a man called Colfax, who becomes infatuated with a woman called Siorane. Owned by her father and seeing what a heartless man Colfax is, Siorane determines to influence her father's asking price; working on the assumption that if Colfax has to pay a lot for her, at least he'll appreciate her. So the price is set: one sun's tear - a shining gem of incredible value. Unknowing, Colfax sets off to find one of the jewels and manages to get one. However, he finds the process of acquiring the gem leaves him cold for Siorane. |
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