A Death in the House and Other Stories by Clifford D. Simak
Sunday, October 30, 2016 at 10:27AM
TChris in Clifford D. Simak, Science Fiction, short stories

Published by Open Road Media on July 5, 2016

A Death in the House is volume 7 in the Complete Short Fiction of Clifford D. Simak series published by Open Road. The introduction attributes Simak’s apparent hiatus from science fiction in the mid-1930s to his work as a newspaper editor, moving from town to town in the Midwest after being hired to save sinking newspapers. At the same time, shrinking markets for sf left him with few places to which he could submit his work. Fortunately, the hiatus did not last long and Simak went on to produce some of science fiction's most memorable stories.

The stories (with publication dates) collected in this volume are:

"Operation Stinky" (1957) - A smelly alien meets a drunken human. This is an amusing story that previews themes that Simak developed in greater depth in “A Death in the House,” also collected in this volume.

"Green Thumb" (1954) - This intelligent alien plant story that also previews “A Death in the House.”

"When it’s Hangnoose Time in Hell" (1946) - A western.

"The Sitters" (1958) - Aliens prove to be twisted babysitters. Those who benefit might approve of the aliens’ approach but parents will be horrified.

"Tools" (1942) - An intelligent cloud of radon from Venus is messing with humans, but the radium industry is big business and profits matter more than people. Like many of Simak’s stories, “Tools” is optimistic even as it cautions against greed and other deadly sins.

"Target Generation" (1953) - A generation ship story with some twists. The story has some features in common with Brian Aldiss’ excellent 1958 novel, Non-Stop.

"War is Personal" (1945) - A “pilots behind enemy lines” war story.

"Nine Lives" (1957) - A time travel story with cats.

"A Death in the House" (1959) - A farmer finds a smelly plant-like alien that soon dies -- or does it? Simak’s humanity shines through in this story, as well as his sense that aliens (and by extension, humans who are different from us) are just as capable of empathy and kindness as we are. It’s my favorite story in the volume and one of Simak’s best.

"The Birch Clump Cylinder" (1974) - An alien starship drive that uses time as a source of energy falls to Earth, setting up a clever time travel story.

None of the stories in this volume are duds and all except the war story entertained me, but only one -- the title story -- shows Simak at this best. It’s interesting, however, to see how two of the earlier stories shaped the title story.

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