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Reviews for Day million

 Day million magazine reviews

The average rating for Day million based on 2 reviews is 4.5 stars.has a rating of 4.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-02-23 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Corey North
Review (for now) is solely for the title story, which is *wonderful.* Hasn't aged a bit: well, maybe a little. And here it is: 5 stars! If you missed it, or it's been awhile -- short, sweet & sexy. Don't miss! Sample: "[Don] traveled in interstellar spaceships. In order to make a spaceship go really fast about thirty-one male and seven genetically female human beings had to do certain things, and Don was one of the thirty-one. Actually he contemplated options. This involved a lot of exposure to radiation flux'not so much from his own station in the propulsive system as in the spillover from the next stage, where a genetic female preferred selections and the subnuclear particles making the selections she preferred demolished themselves in a shower of quanta. ..." Times read: many, over the years. First published in 1966, and I just reread it in my copy of the 1967 Wollheim & Carr Year's Best.
Review # 2 was written on 2021-03-19 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Janet Lyon
Day Million was Pohl's eighth collection of short science fiction published by Ballantine. He was a -very- prolific writer! The cover of the first edition, by Ian Robertson, is worth noting because it's a Escher-esque piece that suggests serious mental speculation, as opposed to the ray-guns and bug-eyed-monsters more usually associated with sf books of the time; Ballantine was making an effort to appeal to a wider, more sophisticated readership. It's also noteworthy that only half of the ten stories originally appeared in the traditional genre magazines, up to that point just about the only market for such stories. The other half came from Rogue, Harlan Ellison's Dangerous Visions anthology, and three from Playboy, which surely paid more per story than Pohl was used to seeing as advances for his novels. There's one story from his old pulp days, an issue of Astonishing Stories edited by Pohl himself, that serves as an interesting comparison piece, It's a Young World. My favorites are the title story and The Day the Martians Came. Some of them have aged a bit due to the intervening societal changes, but Pohl, in his day, was at the top of the form and on the cutting edge.


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