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The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One, 1929–1964
1970 anthology edited by Robert Silverberg
1970 anthology edited by Robert Silverberg
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One, 1929–1964 |
| image | File:The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One, 1929–1964.jpg |
| caption | First edition |
| genre | Science fiction |
| language | English |
| published | 1970 |
| publisher | Doubleday |
The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One, 1929–1964 is a 1970 anthology of English language science fiction short stories, edited by Robert Silverberg. Author Lester del Rey said that "it even lives up to its subtitle", referring to the volume's boast of containing "The Greatest Science-Fiction Stories of All Time".
It was first published by Doubleday and subsequently reprinted by Avon Books in July 1971 (Library of Congress Card Catalog Number: 70-97691; ), and later by Orb.
The book was first published in the UK in 1971 by Victor Gollancz Ltd and in paperback by First Sphere Books in 1972 (in two volumes, split after "First Contact").
The content of the book was decided by a vote of the members of the Science Fiction Writers of America, choosing among short stories (up to 15,000 words long) that predated the Nebula Awards. Among the top 15 vote-getters, one (Arthur C. Clarke's "The Star") was disqualified in order to prevent any writer from being represented twice; it was replaced by the 16th-place finisher ("Arena"), and the resulting list of 15 stories was included in the collection. Silverberg then used his judgment, rather than the strict vote count, in selecting 11 of the next 15, for a total of 26 stories.
In 1973, it was followed by The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume Two: The Greatest Science Fiction Novellas of All Time. Further volumes were published, consisting of early Nebula winners, thus straying outside the original "pre-Nebula" concept.
Contents
| Author | Story Title | Year of first publication | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stanley G. Weinbaum | "A Martian Odyssey" | 1934 | |||
| John W. Campbell | "Twilight" | 1934 | |||
| Lester del Rey | "Helen O'Loy" | 1938 | |||
| Robert A. Heinlein | "The Roads Must Roll" | 1940 | |||
| Theodore Sturgeon | "Microcosmic God" | 1941 | |||
| Isaac Asimov | "Nightfall" | 1941 | |||
| A. E. van Vogt | "The Weapon Shop" | 1942 | |||
| Lewis Padgett | "Mimsy Were the Borogoves" | 1943 | |||
| Clifford D. Simak | "Huddling Place" | 1944 | |||
| Fredric Brown | "Arena" | 1944 | |||
| Murray Leinster | "First Contact" | 1945 | |||
| Judith Merril | "That Only a Mother" | 1948 | |||
| Cordwainer Smith | "Scanners Live in Vain" | 1948 | |||
| Ray Bradbury | "Mars Is Heaven!" | 1948 | |||
| Cyril M. Kornbluth | "The Little Black Bag" | 1950 | |||
| Richard Matheson | "Born of Man and Woman" | 1950 | |||
| Fritz Leiber | "Coming Attraction" | 1950 | |||
| Anthony Boucher | "The Quest for Saint Aquin" | 1951 | |||
| James Blish | "Surface Tension" | 1952 | |||
| Arthur C. Clarke | "The Nine Billion Names of God" | 1953 | |||
| Jerome Bixby | "It's a *Good* Life" | 1953 | |||
| Tom Godwin | "The Cold Equations" | 1954 | |||
| Alfred Bester | "Fondly Fahrenheit" | 1954 | |||
| Damon Knight | "The Country of the Kind" | 1955 | |||
| Daniel Keyes | "Flowers for Algernon" | 1959 | |||
| Roger Zelazny | "A Rose for Ecclesiastes" | 1963 |
Reception
Algis Budrys, finding the story selection inexact, concluded that "the book is as advertised – a basic one-volume library of the short science fiction story," but that "you should also leave space beside it."
References
References
- (1972). "Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume 1". First Sphere Books.
- "Galaxy Bookshelf," [[Galaxy Science Fiction. ''Galaxy'']], December 1970, pp. 93–94.
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