SF: The Best of the Best – August, 1968 [Norman Adams] (Dell # 0508)

And now, we come to what in effect is the final volume of Judith Merril’s 1950s-1960s science fiction (and fantasy) anthology, SF: The Best of the Best.  This un-numbered series anthology comprises a collection of what truly were the best stories gathered across all volumes of SF, and in this, it succeeds entirely.  Unlike prior books in the series, this volume is absent of non-fiction commentary or scientific speculation, cartoons, poems, and especially (thankfully!) stories-not-published-elsewhere commissioned solely for this series.  If you were to purchase any one volume of SF, this is the one.

Given this book’s title, it would seem that the intention of Judith Merril (and Dell) was that the series would end with this volume, which represents a retrospective of the entire series.  However, Volume 12 – in reality the actual, final volume – was published in 1969, a year after this compilation.  So, it would seem that the publication schedule was reversed as the series approached its culmination.

Norman Adams’ cover painting, which has an eerie anthropomorphic theme, represents a combination of elements from both science fiction and fantasy, especially the latter.  Something tells me that this painting could have been inspired by (or could have inspired, if we’re talking about time travel, parallel universes, and backwards causation!) the hieroglyphic murals upon the walls of the un-named city of the Elder Things in H.P. Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness.  

Just sayin’.  One never knows, do one?

All these stories…

Introduction (SF: The Best of the Best), Essay by Judith Merril

“The Hoofer”, by Walter M. Miller, Jr.,
from Fantastic Universe, September, 1955 (Volume 1)

“Bulkhead”, by Theodore Sturgeon,
from Galaxy Science Fiction, March, 1955 (Volume 1)

“Anything Box” (variant of The Anything Box), by Zenna Henderson,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October, 1956 (Volume 2)

“Prima Belladonna” (Vermilion Sands series), by J.G. Ballard,
from Science Fantasy, December, 1956 (Volume 2)

“Casey Agonistes”, by R.C. McKenna,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September, 1958 (Volume 4)

“A Death in the House”, by Clifford D. Simak,
from Galaxy Science Fiction, October, 1959 (Volume 5)

“Space-Time for Springers” (Gummitch the Cat series), by Fritz Leiber,
from Star Science Fiction Stories No. 4, November, 1958 (Volume 4)

“Pelt”, by Carol Emshwiller,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, November, 1958 (Volume 4)

“Stranger Station”, by Damon Knight,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December, 1956 (Volume 2)

“Satellite Passage”, by Theodore L. Thomas,
from If, December, 1958 (Volume 4)

“No, No, Not Rogov!” (The Instrumentality of Mankind series), by Cordwainer Smith (Paul M. Linebarger),
from If, February, 1959 (Volume 5)

“Compounded Interest”, by Mack Reynolds,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, August, 1956 (Volume 2)

“Junior”, by Robert Abernathy,
from Galaxy Science Fiction, January, 1956 (Volume 1)

“Sense from Thought Divide” (Ralph Kennedy series), by Mark Clifton,
from Astounding Science Fiction, March, 1955 (Volume 1)

“Mariana, by Fritz Leiber”,
from Fantastic Science Fiction Stories, February, 1960 (Volume 5)

“Plenitude”, by Will Worthington (Will Mohler),
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, November, 1959 (Volume 5)

“Day at the Beach”, by Carol Emshwiller,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, August, 1959 (Volume 5)

“Let’s Be Frank”, by Brain W. Aldiss,
from Science Fantasy, June, 1957 (Volume 3)

“The Wonder Horse”, by George Bryam,
from The Atlantic Monthly, August, 1957 (Volume 3)

“Nobody Bothers Gus” (Gus series), by Algis Budrys,
from Astounding Science Fiction, November, 1955 (Volume 1)

“The Prize of Peril”, by Robert Sheckley,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May, 1958 (Volume 4)

“The Handler”, by Damon Knight,
from Rogue, August, 1960 (Volume 5)

“The Golem”, by Avram Davidson,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, March, 1955 (Volume 1)

“The Sound Sweep”, by J.G. Ballard (Variant of “The Sound-Sweep”,
from Science Fantasy, #39, February, 1960), specifically for this volume (Volume 5)

“Hickory, Dickory, Kerouac”, by Richard Gehman,
from Playboy, March, 1958 (Volume 4)

“Dreaming Is a Private Thing”, by Isaac Asimov,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December, 1955 (Volume 1)

“The Public Hating”, by Steve Allen,
from The Blue Book Magazine, January, 1955 (Volume 1)

“You Know Willie”, by Theodore R. Cogswell,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May, 1957 (Volume 3)

“One Ordinary Day, with Peanuts”, by Shirley Jackson,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, January, 1955 (Volume 1)

And in conclusion, a textual solution!

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

This Book’s Contents

Published Variants of This Book (Just two!)

SF 12 – June, 1969 [Paul Lehr] (Dell # 7815)

Rather than having been released in 1968, as would have been expected after the publication of SF 11 in 1967, the 12th volume of Judith Merril’s SF anthology – specifically, SF12 – appeared in 1969.  Marking the end of the series, this last? (see SF: The Best of The Best) anthology marked a return to direct and representational space art, albeit of a diminutive form: Paul Lehr’s spacecraft-flying-above-a-moonscape occupies only a small portion of the cover.  But, the minimalism of the scene – the near-black and vaguely starlit background of space fading indistinguishably into the darkness of the rest of the cover – is appealing and very effective.  On first glance I assumed this was the earth and moon, but on second view this seems not so.

What about the content?  This last volume furthers a trend seem in earlier editions of the series, with emphasis:  A full twelve stories – over a third of the thirty items comprising the book’s content – were (I guess commissioned?) and written specifically for this book.  Alas, with the exception of Bob Shaw’s “Light of Other Days” – a genuinely moving and very well written story firmly rooted in an intersection between scientific speculation and the human nature – the content is not all that memorable. 

Still, here’s the book:

Lots and lots of stories ‘n stuff!

Introduction: Fish Out of Water, Man Beside Himself, Essay by Judith Merril

“The Cinemagicians”, by Tuli Kupferberg,
specifically for this volume

“In Seclusion”, by Harvey Jacobs,
from New Worlds, #179, February, 1968

“The Food Farm”, by Kit Reed,
from Orbit 2, June, 1967

“Gogol’s Wife”, by Tommaso Landolfi (trans. of La moglie di Gogol 1944),
from book Gogol’s Wife & Other Stories, 1963

“The Balloon”, by Donald Barthelme,
from The New Yorker, April 16, 1966

“The Cloud-Sculptors of Coral D” (Vermilion Sands series), by J. G. Ballard,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December, 1967

“Luana”, by Gilbert Thomas,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September, 1966

“W-a-v-e-r”, by Tuli Kupferberg,
specifically for this volume

“During the Jurassic”, by John Updike,
from Transatlantic Review, Summer, 1966

The Fall of Frenchy Steiner”, by Hilary Bailey,
from New Worlds SF, July-August, 1964

“Light of Other Days” (Slow Glass series) by Bob Shaw,
from Analog Science Fiction -> Science Fact, August 1966

“Beyond the Weeds”, by Peter Tate,
specifically for this volume

“Crab-Apple Crisis”, by George MacBeth (variant of Crab Apple Crisis),
specifically for this volume

“The Primary Education of the Camiroi” (Camiroi series),
by R. A. Lafferty (variant of Primary Education of the Camiroi 1966),
specifically for this volume

“When I Was Miss Dow”, by Sonya Dorman,
from Galaxy Magazine, June, 1966

“A Vacation on Earth”, by Thomas M. Disch,
specifically for this volume

“Confluence”, by Brian W. Aldiss,
from Punch, August 30, 1967
Journal from Ellipsia (excerpt), by Hortense Calisher,
specifically for this volume

“An Ornament to His Profession” (Conrad Patrick series), by Charles L. Harness,
from Analog Science Fiction -> Science Fact, February 1966

“Narrow Valley”, by R. A. Lafferty,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September, 1966

“They Do Not Always Remember”, by William S. Burroughs (as by William Burroughs),
from Argosy (UK), March, 1967

“The Winter Flies”, by Fritz Leiber,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October, 1967”

“When I First Read …” (1966) by Dick Allen,
specifically for this volume

“You: Coma: Marilyn Monroe”, by J. G. Ballard,
from New Worlds, June, 1966

“And More Changes Still”, by Henri Michaux (trans. of Encore des changements 1929),
specifically for this volume

“The Other”, by Katherine MacLean,
from New Worlds SF, July, 1966

“Chicken Icarus”, by Carol Emshwiller (variant of A Dream of Flying),
specifically for this volume

“In the Egg”, by Günter Grass, (translation of Im Ei 1958),
specifically for this volume

“The Star-Pit”, by Samuel R. Delany (variant of The Star Pit),
from Worlds of Tomorrow, February, 1967

“Personal”, by Tuli Kupferberg,
specifically for this volume

 We come to a conclusion, sans confusion.

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

This Book’s Contents

Published Variants of This Book (Four and no more, but not a bore!)

11th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F – September, 1967 [George Ziel] (Dell # 2241)

Continuing with the series’ later trend of incomprehensively bad cover art, we come to the 11th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F.  This composition’s pretty simple: a “face” (veritably: booo!) is set between some-kind-of-planet-symbols, against a dark violet background.  Nothing to write home about; nothing to remember; I’m just including this post for the sake of comprehensively showing the series.

Otherwise, I found nothing memorable; worthy of comment, for this edition of the series.  However, it’s interesting that seven stories were specifically written for this volume.  By no means is this collection a “galaxy of genius”.  It is, however, a collection.  

Turn the page(s)…

Introduction (11th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F), Essay by Judith Merril

“Something Else”, by Robert J. Tilley,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October, 1965

“The Volcano Dances”, by J. G. Ballard,
from book The Terminal Beach, June, 1964

“Slow Tuesday Night”, by R. A. Lafferty,
from Galaxy Magazine, April, 1965

“Better Than Ever”, by Alex Kirs,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, March, 1965

“Coming-of-Age Day”, by A. K. Jorgensson,
from Science Fantasy, September, 1965

“The Wall”, by Josephine Saxton,
from Science Fantasy, November, 1965

“The Survivor”, by Walter F. Moudy,
from Amazing Stories, May, 1965

“Moon Duel”, by Fritz Leiber,
from If, September, 1965

“Project Inhumane”, by Alexander Malec,
specifically for this volume

“Those Who Can, Do”, by Robert T. Kurosaka (as by Bob Kurosaka),
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, January, 1965

“Susan”, by Keith Roberts (as by Alistair Bevan),
from Science Fantasy, April, 1965

“Yesterdays’ Gardens”, by Johnny Byrne,
from Science Fantasy, November, 1965

“The Roaches”, by Thomas M. Disch,
from Escapade, October, 1965

“Game”, by Donald Barthelme,
from The New Yorker, July 31, 1965

“J Is for Jeanne”, by E. C. Tubb,
from New Worlds SF, December, 1965

“Terminal”, by Ron Goulart,
from Fantastic Stories of Imagination, May, 1965

“The Plot”, by Tom Herzog,
from Rogue, December, 1965

“Investigating the Bidwell Endeavors”, by David R. Bunch,
specifically for this volume

“The Case”, by Peter Redgrove,
specifically for this volume

“There’s a Starman in Ward 7”, by David Rome,
from New Worlds SF, #146, January, 1965

“Eyes Do More Than See”, by Isaac Asimov,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April, 1965

“Maelstrom II”, by Arthur C. Clarke,
from Playboy, April, 1965

“Two Telepathic Letters to Lord Kelvin”, by Alfred Jarry,
specifically for this volume

“Warrior” (Childe Cycle series), by Gordon R. Dickson,
from Analog Science Fiction -> Science Fact, December 1965

“Mars Is Ours!”, by Art Buchwald,
specifically for this volume

“Scarfe’s World”, by Brian W. Aldiss,
from Worlds of Tomorrow, March, 1965

“A Singular Case of Extreme Electrolyte Balance Associated with Folie a Deux”,
by Robert D. Tschirgi, specifically for this volume

“A Magus” (poem), by John Ciardi,
specifically for this volume

“The Circular Ruins”, by Jorge Luis Borges (translation of “Las ruinas circulares” 1940,
from book El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan, 1941),
in book Labyrinths: Selected Stories & Other Writings, 1962

“The Girl Who Drew the Gods”, by Harvey Jacobs,
from Mademoiselle, May, 1965

“The Drowned Giant”, by J. G. Ballard,
from book The Terminal Beach, June, 1964

“Circe Undersea or a Cry from the Depths”, by George MacBeth,
specifically for this volume

“Somewhere Not Far from Here”, by Gerald Kersh,
from Playboy, March, 1965

“In the Ruins”, by Roald Dahl,
specifically for this volume

“Traveller’s Rest”, by David I. Masson,
from New Worlds SF, September, 1965

“Ado About Nothing”, by Robert K. Ottum (as by Bob Ottum, Jr.),
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, March, 1965

Summation (The 11th Annual of the Year’s Best S-F), Essay by Judith Merril

Still life with references

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

This Book’s Contents

Published Variants of This Book (Neither four nor three but two I see!)

10th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F – December, 1966 [George Ziel] (Dell # 8611)

The 10th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F, features cover art having a “spacey” mood to it:  An oblate spheroid with a banded, orange-brown atmosphere (A “brown dwarf” A gas giant?) hovers at lower left, while at upper center, is that a blue-dwarf sun that we see in the distance?  Alas, given muted colors and dark greenish-gray background, it’s neither a vivid nor striking nor memorable image.  But I suppose it nominally fulfills the role of cover art.  Barely. 

As for the content of this volume.  Well.  Ahem.  Continuing the trend of prior, recent editions of the S-F (or if you prefer, SF) series, there’s nothing that memorable here.  The singular exception is Roger Zelazny’s “A Rose for Ecclesiastes”, which is probably the best story in this volume.  

What you’ll find inside…

“Automatic Tiger”, by Kit Reed,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, March, 1964

“The Carson Effect”, by Richard Wilson,
from Worlds of Tomorrow, November, 1964

“The Shining Ones”, by Arthur C. Clarke,
from Playboy, August, 1964

“Pacifist”, by Mack Reynolds,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, January, 1964

“The New Encyclopaedist” (New Encyclopaedist series), by Stephen Becker,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May, 1964

“The Legend of Joe Lee”, by John D. MacDonald,
from Cosmopolitan, October, 1964

“Gas Mask”, by James D. Houston,
specifically for this volume

“A Sinister Metamorphosis”, by Russell Baker,
specifically for this volume

“Sonny”, by Rick Raphael,
from Analog Science Fact -> Science Fiction, April 1963

“The Last Secret Weapon of the Third Reich” (Variant title of “Poslední tajná zbraň Třetí říše?”, 1962), by Josef Nesvabda,
from book Vampires Ltd., 1964

“Descending”, by Thomas M. Disch,
from Fantastic Stories of Imagination, July, 1964

“Decadence” (translation of Décadence unknown), by Romain Gary (Roman Kaczew),
from book Hissing Tales, March, 1964

“Be of Good Cheer”, by Fritz Leiber,
from Galaxy Magazine, October, 1964

“It Could Be You”, by Frank Roberts, from The Bulletin, March, 1962,
first publication in Hal Porter’s Coast to Coast Sydney : Angus et Robertson, 1962 (which credits “The Bulletin”)

“A Benefactor of Humanity”, by James T. Farrell,
specifically for this volume

“Synchromocracy”, by Hap Cawood,
specifically for this volume

“The Search”, by Bruce Simonds,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June, 1964

“The Pirokin Effect”, by Larry Eisenberg,
from Amazing Stories, June, 1964

“The Twerlik”, by Jack Sharkey,
from Worlds of Tomorrow, June, 1964

A Rose for Ecclesiastes”, by Roger Zelazny,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, November, 1963

“The Terminal Beach”, by J.G. Ballard,
from New Worlds Science Fiction, March, 1964

“Problem Child”, by Arthur Porges,
from Analog Science Fact -> Science Fiction, April 1964

“The Wonderful Dog Suit”, by Donald Hall
specifically for this volume

“The Mathenauts”, by Norman Kagan,
from If, July, 1964

“Family Portrait”, by Morgan Kent,
from Fantastic Stories of Imagination, August, 1964

“The Red Egg”, by José María Gironella,
from book Phantoms and Fugitives, 1964

“The Power of Positive Thinking”, by M. E. White,
specifically for this volume

“A Living Doll”, by unknown (as by Robert Wallace),
from Harper’s Magazine, January, 1964

“Training Talk”, by David R. Bunch,
from Fantastic Stories of Imagination, March, 1964

“A Miracle Too Many”, by Alan E. Nourse and Philip H. Smith,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September, 1964

“The Last Lonely Man”, by John Brunner,
from New Worlds SF, May-June 1964

“The Man Who Found Proteus”, by Robert Rohrer,
from Fantastic Stories of Imagination, November, 1964

“Yachid and Yechida”, by Isaac Bashevis Singer (translation of Yahid un Yehidah),
from book Short Friday and Other Stories, 1964

Summation (10th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F), Essay by Judith Merril

And so on…?

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

This Book’s Contents

Published Variants of This Book (Six by golly, potentially jolly!)

9th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best SF – May, 1965 [“Three Lions”] (Dell # 9775)

By the advent of the 9th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F, things had proceeded artlessly:  Similar to the cover of World’s Best Science Fiction 1968 (edited by Donald Wollheim and Terry Carr), rather than a painting, the cover illustration was a makeshift collage of ill-defined stuck-together objects photographed close-up.  I suppose the idea was to create a sense of weirdness and mystery, but the whole thing simply comes off looking odd: There’s a tiny little person (made of clay?) hanging out at the bottom of the cover; to his (hers?) left, some bent paper clips, chunky cobwebs, or clear plastic.  And that’s about it.  Oh well.  

Having read this volume, like the others in Merril’s series, a couple of years ago, the stories still outstanding in my memory are Alfred Bester’s “They Don’t Make Life Like They Used to”, Bernard Malamud’s “The Jewbird”, and Cordwainer Smith’s “Drunkboat”.  Unsurprisingly, prior to this volume I’d read all three stories in other collections.  Though technically well written, typical of Bester’s oeuvre, his story begins on an optimistic “last man and last women in the world” note, and ends rather disappointingly, and nihilistically, perhaps because having been written in the early 60s, he wanted to run counter to the sense of triumphant optimism previously associated with the genre.  Smith’s Drunkboat, is, like all (I mean all) of Smith’s body of work, an excellent choice.  (Then again, I’ve long thought that Smith (real name Paul M. Linebarger) is among the top ten (top five?!) science fiction writers of the twentieth century.  Ah, but what about Malamud’s “The Jewbird”?  Having previously read this tale (in a collection of that author’s stories published in the early 70s), I wondered (and wonder) why it was even chosen for inclusion in S-F.  It’s emphatically not science fiction by any stretch of interpretation.  (Really.)  Even to consider it a fantasy requires mental somersaults far beyond the ability of ordinary editors.  (Truly.)  I’d deem it a thinly veiled form of social allegory, or, social criticism, about internalized antisemitism.  Regardless of its merits as “a story”, its presence here indicates the way the content of this series veered away from science fiction to include a hodge-podge of items peripherally related to the genre.

I don’t plan to re-read this collection, but it was an interesting diversion.  

And inside?

“Bernie the Faust”, by William Tenn,
from Playboy, November, 1963

“Fortress Ship” (Berserker series), by Fred Saberhagen,
from If, January, 1963

“Mr. Waterman”, by Peter Redgrove,
from book The Nature of Cold Weather & Other Poems, 1961

“Mrs. Pigafetta Swims Well”, by Reginald Bretnor,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May, 1963

“Tree Trunks” (cartoon), by John Gallagher,
specifically for this volume

“They Don’t Make Life Like They Used to”, by Alfred Bester,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October, 1963

“The Great Nebraska Sea”, by Allan Danzig,
from Galaxy Magazine, August, 1963

“The Faces Outside”, by Bruce McAallister,
from If, July, 1963

“A Slight Case of Limbo”, by Lloyd Biggle, Jr.,
from Analog Science Fact -> Science Fiction, April 1963

“237 Talking Statues, Etc.”, by Fritz Leiber,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September, 1963

“The Jazz Machine”, by Richard Matheson,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February, 1963

“Mourning Song”, by Charles Beaumont,
from Gamma 1, July, 1963

“Dog Eat Dog” (cartoon), by Jules Feiffer,
specifically for this volume

“The Jewbird”, by Bernard Malamud,
specifically for this volume

“On the Fourth Planet”, by J.F. Bone,
from Galaxy Magazine, April, 1963

“Poppa Needs Shorts”, by Leigh Richmond and Walt Richmond,
specifically for this volume

“Double Standard”, by Fredric Brown,
from book The Bedside Playboy, 1963

“Interview”, by Frank A. Javor,
from Analog Science Fact -> Science Fiction, November, 1963

“Eight O’Clock in the Morning”, by Ray Nelson,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, November, 1963

“Where Is Everybody?”, Essay by Ben Bova,
from Amazing Stories, May, 1963

“The Earth Dwellers” (variant of Book Fragments d’une histoire universelle / Fragments of Universal History, 1928),
from the book The Weigher of Souls & the Earth Dwellers, 1963

“The Nobel Prize Winners”, by W.J.J. Gordon,
from The Atlantic Monthly, November, 1963

“Hot Planet”, by Hal Clement,
from Galaxy Magazine, August, 1963

“IBM” (cartoon), by Mort Gerberg,
specifically for this volume

“Confessions of the First Number”, by Cliff Owsley,
specifically for this volume

“The Ming Vase”, by E.C. Tubb,
from Analog Science Fact -> Science Fiction, May 1963

“A Bargain with Cashel”, by Gerald Kersh,
from The Saturday Evening Post, April 27, 1963

“Drunkboat” (The Instrumentality of Mankind series), by Cordwainer Smith,
from Amazing Stories, October, 1963

Summation: SF, 1963, essay by Judith Merril, 1964

Books (The 9th Annual of the Year’s Best SF), essay by Anthony Boucher, 1964

Honorable Mentions (The 9th Annual of the Year’s Best SF), essay by Judith Merril, 1964

Still Life With Pixels

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

This Book’s Contents

Published Variants of This Book (Just two!)

8th Annual Edition The Year’s Best S-F – June, 1964 [Unknown Artist] (Dell # 9774)

Not much to see here, folks.

Continuing the trend of volumes 6 and 7, the 8th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F bears cover art that’s best termed diminutive.  It shows an explosion – a meteorite? (or is it a gas nebula?), giving the cover a “spacey” air.  This time, the artist’s name isn’t listed; perhaps an employee of Dell?  As before, cover at is becoming less central and more perfunctory with each succeeding issue.  

Unlike prior volumes in the series, the content here is almost entirely short stories, with only three items specifically about science fiction – two by Judith Merril, and one by Anthony Boucher – appearing at the end of the book.  

Contents, contents, contents…

“The Unsafe Deposit Box”, by Gerald Kersh,
from The Saturday Evening Post, April 14, 1962

“Seven-Day Terror”, by R.A. Lafferty,
from If, March, 1962

“The Toy Shop”, by Harry Harrison, variant of “Toy Shop”,
from Analog Science Fact -> Science Fiction, April, 1962, specifically for this volume

“The Face in the Photo”, by Jack Finney,
from The Saturday Evening Post, October 13, 1962

“The Circuit Riders”, by R.C. Fitzpatrick,
from Analog Science Fact -> Science Fiction, April, 1962

“Such Stuff”, by John Brunner,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June, 1962

“The Man Who Made Friends with Electricity”, by Fritz Leiber,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, March, 1962

“Kings Who Die”, by Poul Anderson,
from If, March, 1962

“The Unfortunate Mr. Morky”, by Vance Aandahl,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October, 1962

“Christmas Treason”, by James White,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, January, 1962

“A Miracle of Rare Device”, by Ray Bradbury,
from Playboy, January, 1962

“All the Sounds of Fear”, by Harlan Ellison,
from the book Ellison Wonderland, June, 1962

“One of Those Days”, by William F. Nolan,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May, 1962

“The Day Rembrandt Went Public”, by Arnold M. Auerbach,
from Harper’s Magazine, July, 1962

“Ms. Found in a Bus”, by Russell Baker,
specifically for this volume

“The Insane Ones”, by J.G. Ballard,
from Amazing Stories, January, 1962

“Leprechaun”, by William Sambrot,
from Escapade, October, 1962

“Change of Heart”, by George Whitley,
from New Worlds Science Fiction, #110, September, 1961

“Angela’s Satyr”, by Brian Cleeve,
from The Saturday Evening Post, November 3, 1962

“Puppet Show”, by Fredric Brown,
from Playboy, November, 1962

“Hang Head, Vandal!”, by Mark Clifton,
from Amazing Stories, April, 1962

“Earthlings Go Home!”, by Mack Reynolds,
from Rogue, August, 1962

“The Martian Star-Gazers”, by Frederik Pohl,
from Galaxy Magazine, February, 1962

“Planetary Effulgence”, by Bertrand Russell,
from New Statesman, September 5, 1959

“Deadly Game”, by Edward Wellen,
from If, May, 1962

“Subcommittee”, by Zenna Hederson,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July, 1962

“The Piebald Hippogriff”, by Karen Anderson,
from Fantastic Stories of Imagination, May, 1962

“Home from the Shore”, by Gordon R. Dickson,
from Galaxy Magazine, February, 1963

Summation: S-F, 1962, Essay by Judith Merril, December, 1963

Books (The 8th Annual of the Year’s Best S-F), Essay by Anthony Boucher, December, 1963

Honorable Mentions (The 8th Annual of the Year’s Best S-F), Essay by Judith Merril, December, 1963

And so?

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

This Book’s Contents

Published Variants of This Book (Alive at five!)

7th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F – June, 1963 [Ralph W. Brillhart] (Dell # 9773)

Like the series’ previous edition (6th), the 7th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F has a relatively simple cover: On a black background, spinning-snake-like-wisps of yellow are embedded in an orange sphere, which floats in space above a network of colored squares:  Is this a city?  This delicate painting by Paul Brillhart has a deliberate air of ambiguity and wonder to it.  Reminds me a little of Paul Klee’s birds…  

I read the book.  The singularly outstanding tale by far is Cordwainer Smith’s “A Planet Named Shayol”, which I’d originally read in an anthology of Smith’s stories; linked below.  Otherwise, volume 7 of this series continues to represent the inclusion of non-fiction works, a cartoon, and various odds and ends, like prior volumes.  

 Contentz?

“Oneiromachia”, Poem by Conrad Aiken,
specifically for this volume

“A Passage from the Stars”, by Katie Hurlbut,
from The Saturday Evening Post, May 13, 1961

“Among the Dangs” (excerpt), by George P. Elliott,
specifically for this volume

“Immediately Yours”, by Robert Beverly Hale,
from Mademoiselle, November, 1961

“Parky”, by David Rome,
from Science Fantasy, August, 1961

“The Fastest Gun Dead” (Dr. Hiram Pertwee series), by Julian F. Grow,
from If, March, 1961

“All the Tea in China”, by Reginald Bretnor,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May, 1961

“The Portobello Road”, by Muriel Spark,
from The Go-Away Bird and Other Stories (1958)

“Ottmar Balleau X 2”, by George Bamber,
from Rogue, March, 1961

“The Dandelion Girl”, by Robert F. Young,
from The Saturday Evening Post, April 1, 1961

“Nightmare in Time”, by Fredric Brown (Variant title of “The End”, from book Nightmares and Geezenstacks, July, 1961),
specifically for this volume

“Looking Backward” (cartoon), by Jules Feiffer,
specifically for this volume

“Three Prologues and an Epilogue”, Poem by John Dos Passos,
specifically for this volume

“It Becomes Necessary”, by Ward Moore,
specifically for this volume

“My Trial As a War Criminal”, by Leo Szilard,
(Composed in 1947, first published in University of Chicago Law Review, Fall 1949,
from book The Voice of the Dolphins, and Other Stories, 1961)

“A Prize for Edie”, by J.F. Bone (Jesse Franklin Bone),
from Analog Science Fact -> Fiction, April, 1961

“Freedom”, by Mack Reynolds,
from Analog Science Fact -> Fiction, February 1961

“High Barbary”, by Lawrence Durrell,
from Mademoiselle, September, 1961

“The Quaker Cannon”, by C.M. Kornbluth and Frederik Pohl,
from Analog Science Fact -> Fiction, August 1961

“Quake, Quake, Quake”, Interior art by Edward Gorey,
specifically for this volume

“Quake, Quake, Quake” (Excerpt), Poem by Paul Dehn,
specifically for this volume

“Judas Bomb”, by Kit Reed,
specifically for this volume

“A Small Miracle of Fishhooks and Straight Pins”, by David R. Bunch,
from Fantastic Stories of Imagination, June, 1961

“The Tunnel Ahead”, by Alice Glaser,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, November, 1961

“Extraterrestrial Trilogue on Terran Self-Destruction”, Poem by Sheri S. Tepper (as by Sheri S. Eberhart), from Galaxy Magazine, August, 1961

“The Countdown”, by John Haase,
from The New Yorker, October 7, 1961

“The Beat Cluster”, by Fritz Leiber,
from Galaxy Magazine, October, 1961

“In Tomorrow’s Little Black Bag”, by James Blish,
specifically for this volume

“The Ship Who Sang”, by Anne McCaffrey (The Ship Who … series),
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April, 1961

A Planet Named Shayol” (The Instrumentality of Mankind series), by Cordwainer Smith (Paul M. Linebarger),
from Galaxy Magazine, October, 1961

“The Asteroids”, 2194 (Troons series), by John Wyndham,
from New Worlds Science Fiction #100, November, 1960

“The Long Night” (The Exploits of Argo series), by Ray Russell,
from book Sardonicus and Other Stories, 1961

“To an Astronaut Dying Young”, poem by Maxime W. Lumin,
from The Atlantic Monthly, December, 1961

Summation: S-F, 1961, Essay by Judith Merril,
specifically for this volume

Books (The 7th Annual of the Year’s Best S-F), Essay by Anthony Boucher,
specifically for this volume

Honorable Mentions (The 7th Annual of the Year’s Best S-F), Essay by Judith Merril,
specifically for this volume

And otherwise?

Still life with references

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

This Book’s Contents

Published Variants of This Book (Three there are, but they go quite far)

6th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F – June, 1962 [John Van Zwienen] (Dell # 9772)

The 6th Annual Edition: The Year’s Best S-F, marks Judith Merril’s series’ transition from cover art created by Richard M. Powers, to covers illustrations created by other artists, or, art agencies.  Why?  Unknown.  Perhaps the reasons were budgetary on the part of Dell; perhaps Powers had other commitments; perhaps he simply wanted to move on, to other projects.  Regardless, in aesthetic terms, the series lost the innovative and original “look” apparent from the covers of the first five issues.  From this point forward, the cover art is vastly simpler and less original than Powers’, as a general rule featuring a single, hard-to-define “object” in the center of the cover, with no real background.  As in this whatever-it-is / interstellar-yellowish-green ball-of-yarn, created by John Can Zwienen. 

My favorite story within this edition is “The Fellow Who Married the Maxill Girl” by Ward Moore, the author of the superb alternate history of the American Civil War (and beyond), “Bring the Jubilee”, which is far less pure science fiction than it is historical, philosophical, and sociological speculation.  Howard Fast’s “The Large Ant” is also a great story, albeit in the realm of classic science fiction (with a Fortean undertone), and ending on a note of mystery and unresolved paranoia.  Fast’s story originally appeared in Fantastic Universe accompanied by an illustration by Virgil W. Finlay, which is included here.  Otherwise, note that this edition, like other anthologies in this series, includes some works of non-fiction; even a cartoon.  

Contents? – Contents!

Introduction (“The 6th Annual of the Year’s Best S-F”), Essay by Judith Merril

“Double, Double, Toil and Trouble”, by Holley Cantine,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, January, 1960

“The Never-Ending Penny”, by Bernard Wolfe [Variant “The Never Ending Penny”,
from Playboy, September, 1960], specifically for this volume

The Fellow Who Married the Maxill Girl”, by Ward Moore,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February, 1960

“Something Invented Me”, by R.C. Phelan,
specifically for this volume

“A Sigh for Cybernetics”, by Felicia Lamport,
specifically for this volume

“Obvious!” (cartoon), by Michael Ffolkes,
specifically for this volume

“I Remember Babylon”, by Arthur C. Clarke,
from Playboy, May, 1960

“The Lagging Profession”, Essay by Leonard Lockhard [Theodore L. Thomas],
from Analog Science Fact -> Fiction, January, 1961

“The Distortion” (cartoon), by Shel Silverstein,
specifically for this volume

“Report on the Nature of the Lunar Surface”, by John Brunner,
from Astounding / Analog Science Fact & Fiction, August, 1960

“J.G.” (Excerpt from “J.G. the Upright Ape”), by Roger Price,
specifically for this volume

“Chief”, by Harry Slesar,
specifically for this volume

Psalm”, by Lester del Rey,
specifically for this volume

The Large Ant”, by Howard Fast,
from Fantastic Universe, February, 1960

“A Rose by Other Name”, by Christopher Anvil,
from Astounding Science Fiction, January, 1960

“Enchantment”, by Elizabeth Emmett,
from The Saturday Evening Post, October 1, 1960

“Thiotimoline and the Space Age”, by Isaac Asimov,
from Analog Science Fact -> Fiction, October, 1960

“Beach Scene”, by Marshall King,
from Galaxy Magazine, October, 1960

“Creature of the Snows”, by William Sambrot,
from The Saturday Evening Post, October 29, 1960

“Abominable”, by Fredric Brown,
from The Dude, March, 1960

“The Man on Top”, by Reginald Bretnor,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September, 1960

“David’s Daddy”, by Rosel George Brown,
from Fantastic Science Fiction Stories, June, 1960

“The Thinkers” (cartoon), by Walt Kelly,
specifically for this volume

“Something Bright”, by Zenna Henderson,
from Galaxy Magazine, February, 1960

“In the House, Another”, by Joseph Whitehill,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April, 1960

“A Serious Search for Weird Worlds”, Essay by Ray Bradbury,
specifically for this volume

“Ed Lear Wasn’t So Crazy!”, Poem by Hilbert Schenck, Jr.,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June, 1960

“Instructor” (Cartoon), by Thelwell [Norman Thelwell],
specifically for this volume

“The Brotherhood of Keepers, by Dean McLaughlin,
from Astounding / Analog Science Fact & Fiction, July, 1960

“Hemingway in Space” [Authors in Space series], by Kingsley Amis,
from Punch, December 21, 1960

“Mine Own Ways”, by Richard McKenna,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February, 1960

“Old Hundredth”, by Brian W. Aldiss,
from New Worlds Science Fiction #100, November, 1960

“Radiation Blues”, by Theodore R. Cogswell,
specifically for this volume

“Blowup Blues” (poem), by Theodore R. Cogswell,
specifically for this volume

“Ballad of the Shoshonu”, by Gordon R. Dickson,
specifically for this volume

How to Think a Science Fiction Story (excerpt), by G. Harry Stine,
specifically for this volume

The Year in S-F (“The 6th Annual of the Year’s Best S-F”), Essay by Judith Merril
“S-F Books”, Essay Anthony Boucher,
specifically for this volume

Honorable Mentions (“The 6th Annual of the Year’s Best S-F”), Essay by Judith Merril

What else can we say?

(Still life with references)

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

This Book’s Contents

Published Variants of This Book (Three I see, that’s easy!)

The Year’s Best S-F: 5th Annual Edition – January, 1961 [Richard M. Powers] (Dell # F118)

It’s perhaps fitting that the 5th edition of Judith Merril’s S-F (or “SF”, depending on the year), which featured Richard Powers’ final cover for the series, includes what I think is the best set of stories featured by any volume in the series.  

My favorites are Cordwainer Smith’s “No, No, Not Rogov!”, Daniel Keyes’ “Flowers for Algernon”, Clifford Simak’s “A Death in the House”, and J.G. Ballard’s “The Sound Sweep”.  Smith’s stories are remarkable in terms of the consistency and clarity of the future “world” he fashioned, the philosophical and religious undertones that subtly underlie particularly his latter tales, and ultimately, the sense of wonder indelibly imparted by the sheer originality inherent to his universe.  Character development, while present to a degree, is secondary to plot and theme, but given Smith’s skill as a writer, this does not at all detract from his stories.  

As for Powers’ cover art, well, what can one say?  Unlike some of the prior volumes in this series it’s quite busy, what with spacecraft, a gas giant world, a robot (is it a robot?!) and particularly a human-like figure enveloped in flaming bluish-white tendrils.  (Close inspection reveals that he has tendrils rising from his forehead.  For those in the know, could he be a Slan?) 

Powers’ fifth and last appearance for this series is a truly fitting finale.

Open the book, and you’ll encounter…

Introduction “(The 5th Annual of the Year’s Best S-F”), Essay by Judith Merril

“The Handler”, by Damon Knight,
from Rogue, August, 1960

“The Other Wife”, by Jack Finney,
from The Saturday Evening Post, January 30, 1960

“No Fire Burns”, by Avram Davidson,
from Playboy, July, 1959

“No, No, Not Rogov!” [The Instrumentality of Mankind series], by Cordwainer Smith [Paul M. Linebarger],
from If, February, 1959

“The Shoreline at Sunset”, by Ray Bradbury,
from A Medicine for Melancholy

“The Dreamsman”, by Gordon R. Dickson,
from Star Science Fiction No. 6

“Multum in Parvo”, by Jack Sharkey,
from The Gent, December, 1959

“Flowers for Algernon”, by Daniel Keyes,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April, 1959

““What Do You Mean … Human?”“, Essay by John W. Campbell, Jr.,
from Astounding Science Fiction, September, 1959

“Sierra Sam”, Essay by Ralph Dighton,
specifically for this volume

“A Death in the House”, by Clifford D. Simak,
from Galaxy Science Fiction, October, 1959

“Mariana”, by Fritz Leiber
from Fantastic Science Fiction Stories, February, 1960

“An Inquiry Concerning the Curvature of the Earth’s Surface and Divers Investigations of a Metaphysical Nature”,
by Roger Price, specifically for this volume

“Day at the Beach”, by Carol Emshwiller,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, August, 1959

“Hot Argument” [Poor Willie series], by Randall Garrett,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February, 1960

“What the Left Hand Was Doing”, by Darrell T. Langart [Randall Garrett],
from Astounding Science Fiction, February, 1960

“The Sound Sweep”, by J.G. Ballard [Variant of “The Sound-Sweep”,
from Science Fantasy, #39, February, 1960], specifically for this volume

“Plenitude”, by Will Worthington [Will Mohler],
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, November, 1959

“The Man Who Lost the Sea”, by Theodore Sturgeon,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October, 1959

“Make a Prison”, by Lawrence Block,
from Science Fiction Stories [UK] #8, January, 1959

“What Now, Little Man?”, by Mark Clifton,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December, 1959

“Me”, Poem by Hilbert Schenck [as by Hilbert Schenck, Jr.],
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, August, 1959

“The Year’s S-F, Summary and Honorable Mentions”,
Essay by Judith Merril
(variant of The Year’s S-F, Summation and Honorable Mentions (The 5th Annual of the Year’s Best S-F))

So, what else?

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

This Book’s Contents

Published Variants of This Book (Six by golly, that’s awfully jolly!)

SF: The Year’s Greatest Science Fiction and Fantasy: 4th Annual Volume – June, 1959 [Richard M. Powers] (Dell # B129)

“Powers x 4!”: Here’s the 4th volume of Judith Merril’s SF… series, published in 1959, featuring another example of Richard Powers’ book art.  As per the cover of the 3rd volume of the series, the sky (which is actually outer space, what with the earth and moon in an obvious foreground) Powers’ backdrop horizontally transitions from hues of orange, to blue, to very (very) dark blue from bottom to top.  And, a highly stylized multi-stage spacecraft flies away from the earth in an otherwise empty sky.  

Of the stories in this volume, I particularly recall “The Prize of Peril” (the basis of the film “The Running Man“), “Or All the Seas with Oysters”, and “The Comedian’s Children”, the latter of which I very recently read (in September of 2024) in its original format, in Venture Science Fiction … which cover I hope to display at this blog in the future.  Sheckley’s tale is excellent; I like his work in general.  “The Comedian’s Children” very well told, has a denouement that unfortunately gradually veers away from the air of science fiction with which the story began, to an anticlimactic realm redolent of sociology and crime fiction.  As for Avram Davidson’s story?  I actually read that one while a sophomore in college; my original paperback, still in my library, can be viewed at the link below.  It’s a very clever, somewhat dark tale, but really not that profound.  As in volume 3 of this series, note that the latter content of the book is comprised of non-fiction essays, rather than short stories.   

Inside you’ll find…

Introduction (“SF:’59: The Year’s Greatest Science Fiction and Fantasy”), Essay by Judith Merril

“Pelt”, by Carol Emshwiller,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, November, 1958

“Triggerman”, by J.F. Bone [Jesse Franklin Bone],
from Astounding Science Fiction, December, 1958

The Prize of Peril”, by Robert Sheckley,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May, 1958

“Hickory, Dickory, Kerouac”, by Richard Gehman,
from Playboy, March, 1958

“The Yellow Pill”, by Rog Phillips,
from Astounding Science Fiction, October, 1958

“River of Riches”, by Gerald Kersh,
from The Saturday Evening Post, March 8, 1958

“Satellite Passage”, by Theodore L. Thomas,
from If, December, 1958

“Casey Agonistes”, by R.C. McKenna,
from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September, 1958

“Space-Time for Springers” [Gummitch the Cat series], by Fritz Leiber,
from Star Science Fiction Stories No. 4, November, 1958

Or All the Seas with Oysters”, by Avram Davidson,
from Galaxy Science Fiction, May, 1958

“Ten-Story Jigsaw”, by Brian W. Aldiss [variant of “Ten-Story Jigsaw”,
from Nebula Science Fiction “Number 26, January, 1958],
specifically for this volume

“Fresh Guy”, by E.C. Tubb [Edwin Charles Tubb],
from Science Fantasy, June, 1958

“The Beautiful Things”, by Arthur Zirul,
from Fantastic Universe, May, 1958

“The Comedian’s Children”, by Theodore Sturgeon,
from Venture Science Fiction, May, 1958

“The Short-Short Story of Mankind” [variant of “We Are Holding Our Own”,
by John Steinbeck, Lilliput, November, 1955], specifically for this volume

“From Science Fiction to Science Fact: The Universe”, Essay by Judith Merril,
specifically for this volume

“Man in Space”, Essay by Daniel Lang,
from The New Yorker, November, 1958

“Rockets to Where?”, Essay by Judith Merril,
specifically for this volume

“The Thunder-Thieves”, Poem by Isaac Asimov,
specifically for this volume

“The Thunder-Thieves (afterword)”, Essay by Isaac Asimov,
specifically for this volume

The Year’s S-F, Summation and Honorable Mentions
(“SF: The Year’s Greatest Science Fiction and Fantasy: 4th Annual Volume”), Essay by Judith Merril

Still life with references

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

This Book’s Contents

Published Variants of This Book (Only two, could this be true?!)