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Reviews for The best of Fritz Leiber

 The best of Fritz Leiber magazine reviews

The average rating for The best of Fritz Leiber based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2013-06-16 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Eric Carlson
Fritz Leiber is a legendary name in science fiction and fantasy, up there among the stars with the likes of Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke et al. I do not know whether the present book includes his best (since the author has endorsed it himself, it should), but it does have some fantastic stories. Leiber calls himself a "Science Fantasy" writer in the introduction: it seems an apt term, because there is nary a hard SF story in the whole volume, and many of them are outright fantasies. The author uses the world of the future and imagined scientific advances as a prop to hang his stories on, which are mostly fantasy. The story nearest to a hard SF story in the volume, A Pail of Air, is also my personal favourite. Earth has been "abducted" by a passing dark star, pulled into its gravitational field and taken away from the Solar System. The atmosphere has frozen in the absolute zero of space, the different constituents each freezing at a different temperature and forming layers atop the soil, with water at the bottom and oxygen at the top. A scientist and his family have managed to survive by creating an almost-hermetically-sealed-room with a fire which is never allowed to go out: they replenish the oxygen periodically scooping the frozen layer from outside and allowing it to evaporate. The story is told by the young son of the scientist, who has been born on this dismal dead planet. The story is a wonderful paean to mankind, determined to survive no matter what. A couple of stories are surreal vignettes, disturbing in their dark intensity. Interestingly, Leiber says that both these stories "almost wrote themselves". The Man Who Never Grew Young is the story of an eternal in a world where time flows backward: all around him, he sees people grow young and go back into their mothers' wombs, but he is destined live for ever. In Mariana, the world of make-believe is taken to its logical conclusion - which is (terrifyingly!) ridiculous. These stories span the period from the end of the Second World War in the nineteen forties to the cold war period of the early seventies: and many of the stories reflect the concerns of the era in their content and intent. Sanity and Wanted: An Enemy are straightforward in their concern with war and world domination. The Foxholes of Mars and The Big Trek are essentially moralizing stories about war, even with their SF setting - and I found them rather mediocre. Leiber's concerns about right-wing America are reflected in Coming Attraction, Poor Superman and America the Beautiful. In two of these stories, the protagonist is British, and the story is essentially a look at one's own country through foreign eyes. Even though the Soviet Union is a thing of history and the cold war is largely forgotten, these stories remain chilling remainders of where humanity can go when bigotry and paranoia is allowed to dominate - something which is very valid almost all of the "liberal" democracies today. Fritz Leiber is also a terrific satirist. As a person who grew up in the late sixties and early seventies, the story Rum-Titty-Titty-Tum-Tah-Tee was especially hilarious for me: new age philosophy, modern art, jazz music and pop psychology are all put together in a hilarious romp of a tale and lampooned. But for all that, it is still a valid fantasy. The same is also true for The Night He Cried, where Mickey Spillane and his brand of hard-boiled detective fiction is mercilessly slaughtered. There were also a couple of stories I could not quite "get" - Little Miss Macbeth and the multi-award-winning novella Gonna Roll the Bones. However, this is not to take away from the power of these stories: only a confession of the limitations of my aesthetic sensitivities. *** Running across all these stories is the common theme of human existence, the sheer joy of it, even in extremely adverse conditions. This is the real courage to live, as epitomised by the scientist holding on on a destroyed earth in A Pail of Air: Courage is like a ball, son. A person can hold it only so long, then he has to toss it to someone else. When it's tossed you way, you've got to catch it and hold it tight - and hope there'll be someone else to toss it to when you get tired of being brave. If I should choose one passage to describe Fritz Leiber's philosophy (if there is such a thing!), this would be it. *** Fritz Leiber says: All I ever try to write is a good story with a good measure of strangeness in it. The supreme goddess of universe is Mystery, and being well entertained is the highest joy. Any perceptive reader, I feel, would agree wholeheartedly with the entertainment part.
Review # 2 was written on 2012-04-25 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Christina Garnett
This is a great collection of Leiber short stories spanning from the 1940s to the 1970s. What sets it apart from the other three or four such anthologies I have is that Leiber chose the stories himself, and at the end of the book he places an Afterword where he writes a paragraph or two about each one. leiber is one of my favourite writers, but I don't have a lot of insight into the man himself and his thoughts. I find this to be good, actually; plenty of times have I been a little put off by a writer whose work I normally enjoy but whose personal musings just kind of deflate the whole experience for me. However I must say it was pleasurable to read Leiber's thoughts on particular tales and I appreciate him putting this material at the very back of the book, too. I'm going to do what Leiber himself did then and write a bit about my impressions of some of the stories. It's been a long time since I read some of them but there are a few that are so good I've read them again and again. "Gonna Roll the Bones"-- A great story that benefits from a second reading once you figure out what's going on. It's told in a subtle, almost laid back style that belies the heavy occult content of the story. It's like horror without the horror, basically, and so comes down as a kind of fantasy. Someone else here said "magical realism". I'm not 100% confident using that term in general but I suppose it sort of fits here. I was reminded a little of some of Stephen King's better work and I am not at all surprised to learn that he is a big fan of leiber. "Wanted--An Enemy"-- Reminds me of a 1980s episode of The Twilight Zone (one of the better ones). Certainly very informed by the Cold War. Hit'sa bit playful and has a sucker-punch ending. Very cool. "The Man who Never Grew Young"-- Well, they can't all be winners; not too into this one. Reminds of Lray Bradbury, whom I have to confess I'm not the biggest fan of either, although he does have a few strong stories. "Coming Attraction" -- This story was often anthologised, and I'm pretty sure I read it before I had a clue about Leiber's work. It's awesome and I can see why it won awards. It's kind of "future noire", written from a 1950 perspective. Fritz was obviously very cynical about what was happening in American society at the time. The ending makes you feel like shit, and I mean that in a good way. "Poor Superman" -- Another kind of grim future story, possibly meant to be set in the same millieu as "Coming Attrraction", although this one is more "fun". I didn't predict the direction this story went in and the curveball was really appreciated. This is one of many stories where leiber's love of Poe comes to the surface, and as this is a science fiction and not a horror tale, its manifestation is a pleasant surprise here, although of course Poe had some stories that bordered on SF, too. "A Pale of Air" -- One thing I really appreciate about Leiber is his ability to see many different perspectives and to adjust his writing style according to the sort of tale he is telling. here the main character is a little girl living in a future setting where the Earth has been knocked out of orbit, and its atmosphere has liquified and fallen to the surface. there are only a few survivors, but they have learned to adjust to this strange environment. This story talks about what happens when the girl goes outside in a spacesuit to get a pale of air for her and her father... "The Night he Cried" -- Oooh, this is so funny! In his afterword Fritz says he wrote this as a response to Mickey Spilane, because he found his attitude toward women to be regressive and stupid. this is slightly ironic I guess because Leiber himself has been criticised by people like neil Gaiman (who loves him too, by the way) for some of his attitudes toward sex and women. I personally have always found that criticism a little unfair, though I guess that could be because I'm a man, but I feel like he was really trying and there's no doubt that for someone writing in the 40s/50s he had a very open mind. Anyway, "The Night he Cried" is mocking the kind of macho Mike hammer stuff. Let's just say the beautiful bucksome blonde turns out to be a many-tentacled alien and our "hard-bitten" protagonist is not having a great day. This one's a hoot. "Space-Time for Springers" -- Do you love cats? Fritz leiber sure did. they feature prominently in so many of his stories, and this is maybe the ultimate cat story of all. It's short, starts off utterly adorable, and then in the end ... turns heart-breakingly sad. Seriously, if you are a sensitive person you should have the tissues ready for this one. The protagonist is a spry and lively kitten named gummitch with intellectual aspirations, who lives in a house with his human "parents", two children and two grown cats, and and we spend the entire story inside Gummitch's head. it's anthropomorphic, in a very literal way (this will make sense when you read it), but Fritz obviously spent a lot of time observing cats and their behaviour. As a cat fan myself, this one really twisted my heart. it will also teach you to be a bit more sympathetic the next time your cat seems disturbed by its reflection in a big piece of glass. "Try and Change the past" -- A short piece set in the same "time War" as Leiber's excellent novel The BigTime. You don't have to read that to understand this though. it basically takes an interesting time travel concept and brings it to its logical extreme. Might seem a bit old hat now considering how many stories have been written dealing with a similar concept since, but Leiber was one of the first, and this little piece is pretty damn cool. "A Deskful of Girls" -- Walks the line between being humorous and horrific with remarkable aplomb. I think some of the psychological theories described here might be a little academically unsound, but that's really ok to me. Very nice vengeance sort of ending that reads like something from Tales from the Crypt or somesuch.. "Rump-Titty-Titty-Tum-Tah-Tee " -- Another slightly disturbing and simultaneously fun story. With a name like that you know there has to be a vein of lightheartedness running throughout, and there is. leiber is good at telling these sorts of personal, low key stories with heavier, more unsettling implications. "The Man who made Friends with Electricity" -- I loved this. the narrator goes to interview this seemingly harmless old coot who believes that electricity talks to him. What's neat is that this old guy is a bit difficult, prejudiced, rants about commies and stuff, yet still ends up being strangely charming. He meets a bad end though, thanks to his less likable qualities, and instead of thinking to myself, "well the dick kind of deserved it", Leiber manages to make it a bit sad and poignant. "The Good new Days" -- This one's really strange, and there's a lot going on. it starts off as a kind of domestic setting of the future and then goes into territory I'm used to associating with Philip K. Dick. Kind of indescribable; you just have to read it. There are other great stories in here too, like "Little Old Miss macbeth", which I plan to reread soon. No fafhrd and grey mouser stories, and I really do think some of those are among the best stuff leiber has written, but perhaps it was thought that sword and sorcery wouldn't really fit in with this book, which seems to concentrate mostly on Leiber's particular kind of softer SF or "urban" fantasy writing. No "Catch that Zeppelin!" either, but I think that one was written later than most of the stories here. This is a fine introduction to one of the best and most versatile genre writers who ever lived. Not only are the stories of a high quality, but, and this is important, Leiber can really write. I've mentioned several other authors for comparison's sake in my review, but to be honest I think Leiber is a better writer than most of them. His prose has this relaxed, smooth air aboutit that comes across as both affable and attention-grabbing. I think the friendly tone sort of makes the existential qualities of some of his stories hit harder, but maybe that's just me. He'll make you laugh and get angry and feel horrified at the same time, and he's self-aware without being smug or superior or making you feel that he doesn't take anything seriously. When Leiber wants to talk about Shakespeare in his writing (which he often does), it's not to impress you but to make you feel that the Bard's work is amazing like he does. Although quite a few of the stories address Cold War-era concerns, there is a universal quality to them that means generations from now people should still enjoy reading them. Highly recommended to everyone.


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