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snurri ([personal profile] snurri) wrote2010-03-20 01:23 pm
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2010 Reading #24: Killdozer!: Volume III: The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon

Books 1-10.
Books 11-20.
21. And Now We are Going to Have a Party by Nicola Griffith.
22. A Black Explorer at the North Pole by Matthew Henson.
23. Cinnamon Kiss by Walter Mosley.

24. Killdozer!: Volume III: The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon, by Theodore Sturgeon. I invoke Sturgeon with a fair amount of regularity as one of my three favorite Golden Age SF writers (the other two are Cordwainer Smith and Alfred Bester), but I have to confess that there's a lot of Sturgeon I haven't read; my high opinion of him is based mainly on having been blown away by his novel More Than Human. All praise to North Atlantic Books for collecting his many short stories; I've been slowly working through them over the past few years. The highlight of this volume is certainly the title story, in which a fairly slim SFnal premise kicks off a very satisfying horror/survival narrative. At times Sturgeon's hands-on description of heavy machinery operation threw me out, and the epilogue doesn't make a great deal of sense, but this is a really fun story, with some really well-observed commentary on the dynamics of a group of working men. Robert Silverberg's introduction reads almost like an apology for the fact that these are not Sturgeon's best stories, and I guess that's fair to say; but some of them are good, and at least one--the non-genre "Noon Gun"--is great. As a group they provide insight into the writer in transition, from the fairly straightforward thought-experiments of his early work into the increasingly humanist psychological work that became his stock-in-trade.

[identity profile] shsilver.livejournal.com 2010-03-20 06:52 pm (UTC)(link)
I always get a kick out of the location of North Atlantic Books. It seems amazingly misnamed.

[identity profile] tim-pratt.livejournal.com 2010-03-20 08:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Those collected Sturgeons are a treasure, some of my most beloved books. I found the first four at remainder prices in a used bookstore in Santa Cruz many years back, and have diligently collected the rest. It's pretty amazing to see the evolution of his talents and the refinement of his persistent thematic concerns. Sturgeon and Cordwainer Smith are two of my major influences too. (Bester never did much for me, but maybe I read his major works when I was too young to appreciate them.)