T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
425.1 | ATTENTION MR. MODERATOR | EDEN::KLAES | Alchemists get the lead out. | Sat Jan 03 1987 12:48 | 8 |
| I am sorry this does not answer your question, but in light
of the recent number of requests for stories which the noter has
forgotten the title of, it might be wise to put all of them in a
single topic - that way there won't be so much clutter, and the
person's request will be easier to locate.
Larry
|
425.2 | L. Sprague deCamp | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Mon Jan 05 1987 13:17 | 11 |
| Re .1
Good idea. Let us designate this topic as the lost-and-found
department.
Re .0
I can't give you the title of your mystery story, but the author
was L. Sprague deCamp.
Earl Wajenberg
|
425.3 | Its A Good Life ? | IOSG::BAILEY | ZZZZZZzzzzzz........ | Mon Mar 09 1987 05:09 | 17 |
| > Good idea. Let us designate this topic as the lost-and-found
> department.
Ok in this vein who wrote 'Its A Good Life'?, caught the last few minutes
of the Twlight Zone adaptation of this last night, to my credit I
recognized it very quickly but there was no author in the closing credits.
My copy of this seems to have walked and the name Bill Bixby keeps coming
to mind (but thats the Hulk)
So who did write it ?
Ta
Peb
|
425.4 | It's A Good Life | ULTRA::SIMON | How can we know the dancer from the dance? | Mon Mar 09 1987 07:26 | 2 |
| I believe the author was Jerome Bixby. It was originally a short
story.
|
425.5 | the 'rat' episode springs to mind. | ICEMAN::RUDMAN | Extraordinarily lifelike. | Mon Mar 09 1987 13:32 | 3 |
| .4 is correct. The story is more horrifying on paper....
Don
|
425.6 | The rat ? | IOSG::BAILEY | ZZZZZZzzzzzz........ | Mon Mar 09 1987 15:04 | 9 |
| RE . 5
>> -< the 'rat' episode springs to mind. >-
What WAS the rat episode ?, as I said its been a long time
since I read this and my copy seems to have walked
Ta
Peb
|
425.7 | RE 425.6 | EDEN::KLAES | Fleeing the Cylon Tyranny. | Mon Mar 09 1987 15:14 | 13 |
| It was a part in the WRITTEN story which THE TWILIGHT ZONE episode
"It's a GOOD Life" is based on.
The little boy with the incredible mental powers, who keeps an
entire town enslaved, sensed a rat, and - by luring it with the image
of a piece of cheese - mentally forced it to eat itself, from its
tail to its stomach, where it naturally died.
As others have said, I found the written version more frightening
than the TV version, though both were good.
Larry
|
425.8 | Edited for 80 columns | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Protect! Serve! Run Away! | Wed Jul 12 1989 03:57 | 21 |
| ================================================================================
Note 425.8 Lost And Found Deptartment 8 of 8
STKHLM::LITBY "...and he built a Crooked House" 14 lines 11-JUL-1989 09:23
-< How 'bout this one? >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Is the lost & found dept. still open for business?
I'd like to try to find out the title and author of a novel I read many years
ago. It's about time travel, and from what I recall it handled all the well-
known time-travel paradoxes in a very elegant and funny way. The main
character is some sort of investigator who is sent back in time to track the
movements of some crook who (I think) is a copy of himself.
In one section of the book, he is back in Imperial Rome doing some hideously
funny things. I have an irrational feeling that the author might have been
Philip K. Dick, but that's *very* uncertain.
Ideas?
/POL
|
425.9 | Battery Powered Miniature Polar Bear? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Oct 10 1989 11:59 | 14 |
| Maybe someone can help me recover this novel, which I read sometime
in the last year or two. One of the characters genetically engineers
miniature versions of extinct species from Old Earth, as exotic
pets. One of the other characters has one of these, a miniature
(battery powered!) polar bear. The polar bear's name is on the
tip of my tongue...
This is all little more than ambience to the plot of the novel,
but it's the main thing I remember.
Does anybody recognize the story?
len.
|
425.10 | A Guess and a Question | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Patience, and shuffle the cards. | Tue Oct 10 1989 14:52 | 6 |
| I'm not sure, but might it be "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?"?
Was any rationale given for why a genetically engineered (and
presumably living, conventionally organic) animal would run on
batteries?
Earl Wajenberg
|
425.11 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | This is a job for Green Power! | Wed Oct 11 1989 06:54 | 3 |
| Sounds like George R.R. Martin's TUF VOYAGING to me.
--- jerry
|
425.12 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Oct 11 1989 08:45 | 5 |
| I'm going to write a novel and not tell anybody, just so Jerry Boyajian
won't know everything.
-- edp
|
425.13 | We have ways... | STEREO::FAHEL | Amalthea, the Silver Unicorn | Wed Oct 11 1989 09:04 | 5 |
| Who says he won't know?
(hum Twilight Zone Theme here)
K.C.
|
425.14 | RE 425.11 | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Wed Oct 11 1989 11:04 | 2 |
| A discussion on TUF VOYAGING can be found in SF Topic 483.
|
425.15 | Not Them | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Oct 11 1989 17:40 | 17 |
| re .10, .11, it's definitely not either of those, as I've read them
both and remember them well. And Havelock Tuf was an ailurophile.
No room for polar bears, miniature or otherwise.
As to why a battery powered genetically engineered creature - assuming
the technology exists to bioengineer a miniature of an extinct species,
it seems perfectly plausible to engineer it for a battery as energy
source rather than food. No meals, no waste products. Much more
convenient as a pet.
Hasn't anybody else read this book? Am I going to have to go searching
though the random piles in my library, thumbing through all likely
candidates to find it?
len.
|
425.16 | Popkes' Caliban Landing | USMRM4::SPOPKES | | Tue Oct 17 1989 18:55 | 8 |
| You guys have made my day. The name of the book is Caliban Landing
and the name of the bear is Cameron. I know, because I wrote it.
Now watch. I'll hear, "no. That's not it..."
steven popkes
|
425.17 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Oct 17 1989 22:02 | 6 |
| Re .16:
Ooohhh, you beat Jerry! Has that ever happened before?
-- edp
|
425.18 | Cameron It Is!!!! | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Oct 31 1989 10:19 | 5 |
| Yes, that's it!! Great book, and written by one of our very own!
Will you autograph my copy?
len.
|
425.19 | aw. shucks. | USMRM3::SPOPKES | | Tue Oct 31 1989 10:43 | 7 |
| with an invitation like that, how could I refuse?
best to discuss logistics via mail.
I am: USMRM3::SPOPKES
steven popkes
|
425.20 | got the titles. need the book. | USMRM3::SPOPKES | | Tue Oct 31 1989 16:28 | 13 |
| I don't know whether this is the place to put this, but I can't
seem to find another topic.
I have some books that I *know* the author and title, but want to
find copies. So far on some of them I've gotten no help with the
old book dealers.
The current book I'm looking for is "The Transfinite Man" by Colin
Kapp.
Help?
steve p
|
425.21 | Pond Life | ULYSSE::COLLINS | Russ, 828-5371, Valbonne | Thu Dec 06 1990 02:10 | 11 |
| Over a year old; hope someone still reads this note.
I read a story years ago that I think was in a book of short stories.
This was about the cyclic evolution of "beings" who turned out to be
micro organisms living in a pond. Their goal (from what I vaguely
remember) was to survive from their current environment to what they
though was an outside world.
Can anybody remember the story or the book it was in?
russ
|
425.22 | Treetops? | ULYSSE::COLLINS | Russ, 828-5371, Valbonne | Thu Dec 06 1990 02:14 | 6 |
| Another _old_ story I'm looking for was also probably in a book of
short stories. This was about some "beings/creatures/animals/?" living
in the upper strata of a forest. I believe "death" to them was falling
down below the level of the highest leaves of the forest.
russ
|
425.23 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | One of the Happy Generations | Thu Dec 06 1990 02:26 | 6 |
| re:.21
Sounds like James Blish's "Surface Tension" from his collection
THE SEEDLING STARS.
--- jerry
|
425.24 | | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Celebrated ozone dweller. | Thu Dec 06 1990 02:39 | 7 |
| Re .22
The creatures living in the tops of trees also appear in THE SEEDLING
STARS. Both the pond-dwellers and the tree-dwellers are genetically
engineered, human-descended colonists of other planets.
Earl Wajenberg
|
425.25 | Another possibility | SSGBPM::KENAH | I am the catalyst, not the poison | Thu Dec 06 1990 03:46 | 5 |
| The creatures living in the tops of trees might be characters in
Brian Aldiss's "Hothouse" series, collected in the volume "The Long
Afternoon of Earth."
andrew
|
425.26 | Possible answers... | TCC::HEFFEL | Vini, vidi, visa | Sun Dec 09 1990 08:45 | 8 |
| .21 Sounds like a non-Dune Herbert book. The Dosadi Experiment??
And I second Andrew's suggestion of the "Long Afternoon of Earth" for
.22
Tracey
|
425.27 | thanks | ULYSSE::COLLINS | Russ, 828-5173, Valbonne | Sun Dec 09 1990 22:36 | 7 |
| re .23 - .26:
Thanks for the tips. The Seedling Stars sounds right; I remember that
title, but no longer have it. I'll put that and "Long Afternoon..." and
"Dosadi Experiment" on my look-for list.
russ
|
425.28 | | NOMUNY::64288::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Tue Dec 11 1990 10:21 | 5 |
| .21 is defintely not the Dosadi Experiment. I don't know what it is, though.
I'd put it on your list anyway, I liked it a lot.
Will
|
425.29 | How about this one? | COMET::DAVIDSONL | | Tue Feb 23 1993 03:25 | 19 |
| I, so glad to see this lost and found.
I have been looking for a book that I read in high school. (20 yrs ago)
I know its a long time but.........
The world had been destroyed and the survivors have come along to about
the western days. the only book that survived was the bible. If
anythingwas not perfict, it was destroyed as an abomination. If an ear
of corn was not perfect, they burnen the whole crop. Every child had to
be inspected for any defects at birth. They were killed even if they
had a birth mark.
One little boy had telepathic powers and could talk to his brother and
grandmother with his mind, but they could not tell anyone EVER. This
story is about this little boy.
Can anybody help me? Its a great book and I lost it years ago. ;(
|
425.30 | | KERNEL::JACKSON | Peter Jackson - UK CSC TP/IM | Tue Feb 23 1993 08:13 | 8 |
| Re .29
Sounds like The Chrysalids (sp?) by John Wyndham. One of my favourite
books when I was at school.
Peter
|
425.31 | John Wyndham | BEGOOD::HEBERT | Cyberdyne Systems Model 101-A | Fri Feb 26 1993 11:28 | 10 |
| Re .29
I think it's "Re-birth" by John Wyndham. My notes say it was
published in 1955.
Wyndam also wrote "Day of the Triffids".
-- Jeff
|
425.32 | crysalids = re-birth | NEWOA::BAILEY | Todays PN | Sat Feb 27 1993 16:04 | 13 |
| <<< Note 425.31 by BEGOOD::HEBERT �Cyberdyne Systems Model 101-A� >>>
<<< John Wyndham >>>
# Re .29
#
# I think it's "Re-birth" by John Wyndham. My notes say it was
# published in 1955.
#
(1955 "The Chrysalids" ("re-birth" USA)
from "The encylopedia of science fiction"
[this note entered by HNX, an off-line notes reader]
|
425.33 | | WHO301::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Mon Mar 01 1993 14:39 | 8 |
| You have to remember that in the '50s, British books were often published
under different titles in the U.S. It was "Re-birth" the first time I read it.
A British friend and I, both admirers of Brian Aldiss, have spent a lot of
time figuring out that Mr A wrote only half as many books as we jointly
member.
\dave
|
425.34 | THANK YOU! | COMET::DAVIDSONL | | Wed Mar 03 1993 01:38 | 5 |
| THANK YOU ALL SO MUCH. I CALLED A COUPLE USED BOOK STORES TODAY AND
FOUND A COPY!!!
LYNDA :)
|
425.35 | Hey, let's give this a whirl! | COUNT0::WELSH | Think it through | Wed Mar 17 1993 14:20 | 18 |
| This one is from when I was a teenager. It was set in a near-future
Earth which had been conquered by very superior aliens who treated
people like vermin.
So much so that they built elaborate force fields to restrict our
movement. I don't recall much at all beyond the fact that it seemed a
pretty good read, and some guy managed to manipulate the force fields
to his own ends.
I have a feeling he finally succeeded in using them against the aliens,
and putting up some credible resistance. What the outcome was, I forget.
The key to this one is the force fields. There were loving descriptions
of all the colours and textures.
Ring a bell with anyone?
/Tom
|
425.36 | gracias in advance . . . | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | The Bright-Eyed Boy | Wed Mar 17 1993 16:59 | 10 |
|
Borrowed a book from an ex-co-worker - I forget the author, and title -
but the main character was a thief called Trent the Uncatchable.
pretty flimsy clue, I know. It was the sequel to a book I remember
nothing about except there was a group of people called Speed Freaks
who staged a psuedo-rebellion when the world's government(s) outlawed
non-traffic-computer-controlled driving. Anyone? Anyone?
-jimbo
|
425.37 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | No logs for Japan!!! | Thu Mar 18 1993 08:18 | 1 |
| Sounds familiar, kinda cyberpunkish?
|
425.38 | | OASS::MDILLSON | Generic Personal Name | Thu Mar 18 1993 12:53 | 3 |
| re .35
Sounds like Heinlein's "Fifth Column" to me.
|
425.39 | Yes and No . . . | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | The Bright-Eyed Boy | Thu Mar 18 1993 20:25 | 17 |
|
No - not Heinlein . . .
Involved a group of people engineered to be telepaths, then
reviled by the general public. Trent the Uncatchable was the only one
of the group who was NOT tetepathic. Another 'character' was an AI
named 'Ring'.
Very cyberpunkish. Another element were the 'PKF' which stood for
- I think - Peace Keeper Elite, or something similar. These were
cyborgs with mini-laser things in their hands, enhanced strength, and
all the other little goodies that any respectable cyborg should have.
Ring any bells, anyone? Being able to ALMOST remember it is
starting to drive me a bit nutty . . .
gracias, Jimbo
|
425.40 | pass me the stupid hat . . . | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | The Bright-Eyed Boy | Thu Mar 18 1993 20:27 | 3 |
|
Whoops! just noticed .38 referred to .35 - apologies - Jimbo
|
425.41 | Daniel Keys Moran | ODIXIE::MOREAU | Ken Moreau;Sales Support;South FL | Fri Mar 19 1993 11:03 | 33 |
| RE: .36 through .40
That is very definitely the books "Emerald Eyes" and "The Long Run" by
Daniel Keys Moran. Good luck finding them, I found my copy in a used
book store, and they were the only Moran books there.
"Emerald Eyes" tells the story of Carl Castanaveras and his "family", who
are gene-engineered to be telepaths. But what happens when the people who
are gene-engineered to be smarter, faster, and stronger than their creators,
(and are telepaths as well) don't want to do what their creators want? This
is a very good book, with (IMHO) very real characters, and is much better than
my blurb makes it out to be.
"The Long Run" tells the story of Trent, who is one of the gene-engineered
people from "Emerald Eyes". Trent is a thief, who visits most of the worlds
in his "long run". Again IMHO, this is a better book than the first, and is
filled with little tiny details that are delightful. I also felt that the
opponents (I cannot call them bad guys) were well drawn, and had solid
justification for doing what they did; they felt they were right and honorable
people who were doing the best for their society. This is good work in a
light SF story. DEC people will also enjoy it because Trent uses VAX t
echnology in his work.
Spoilers follow:
I don't like "Emerald Eyes", and won't re-read it because of the incredible
downer ending (the PKF nukes the entire Castaneveras family). But I am glad
I read it once, because it gave me more detail about why Trent hates the PKF
so much.
I *love* "The Long Run" because it is a lighter book than "Emerald Eyes", and
is filled with sly asides and humor.
|
425.42 | | DDIF::PARODI | John H. Parodi DTN 381-1640 | Fri Mar 19 1993 11:20 | 7 |
|
Re: .41
Ken, do you happen to know if this is the same Daniel Keyes who wrote
"Flowers for Algernon"?
JP
|
425.43 | gracias, dude | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | The Bright-Eyed Boy | Sat Mar 20 1993 10:17 | 6 |
| Re .41
Ken - thank you thank you thank you. Now I can sleep nights . . .
-Jimbo
|
425.44 | | ODIXIE::MOREAU | Ken Moreau;Sales Support;South FL | Mon Mar 22 1993 12:53 | 22 |
| RE: .42
I strongly suspect *not*, because this is "Daniel Keys Moran"
^^- note no 'e'
and "Flowers for Algernon" was written by "Daniel Keyes"
^- note 'e' plus no MORAN
Further, "Flowers for Algernon" was copyrighted in 1959, and "Emerald Eyes"
was copyrighted in 1988. Further, the blurb talks about "Armageddon Blues"
being Moran's first book, and makes no mention of "Flowers for Algernon".
Given the stature of "Flowers for Algernon", if this was the same author I
would expect the publisher to at least mention it, if not shout it on the
cover or the back blurb.
RE: .43
You're welcome.
-- Ken Moreau
|
425.45 | City of Force | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, Engineering Technical Office | Tue Apr 13 1993 14:53 | 7 |
| re .35 - I'm pretty sure the story you remember is titled "The City of
Force". I have it in a collection of short stories, which is so old
the pages are turning brown. It has long been one of my favorites.
I'll see if I can track it down.
len.
|
425.46 | .35 - my guess is Lord of the Psychon... | STIKNY::GUENTHER | | Wed Apr 14 1993 09:08 | 11 |
| re:.35
I suspect that the book is "Lords of the Psychon" by Daniel F. Galouye,
published in 1963 by Bantam; Library of Congress # 63-9177 ( pre-isbn).
I can't remember much about it, as it is at least 20 years since I read
it, but the back cover says - City of Force huge prisms, obelisks,
cubes, cylinders, rhombohedrons, domes, pyramids shimmered with glowing
colors, corruscating essence, blinding radiance...
/alan
|
425.47 | re .35, .46 | 29736::FEHSKENS | len, Engineering Technical Office | Wed Apr 14 1993 10:19 | 26 |
| The short story (upon which "Lords of the Psychon" must be based, or
from which it was extracted as an excerpt) appeared in
"Bodyguard and four other short science fiction novels from Galaxy"
published by Pocket Books (Permabook edition) in September 1962. The
collection is edited by H. L. Gold. The story by Daniel F. Galouye
is titled "The City of Force". The original edition was by Doubleday,
published in June 1960.
In the short story (at 57 pages does it really qualify as a short novel?)
the protagonist Bruno of the Spruce Clan leaves his sylvan life to
attempt to communicate with the Spheres, who have usurped Earth and
treat Mankind as vermin. Bruno discovers he has some facility at
manipulating the forces that are the substance of the Spheres'
civilization, provoking an "extermination" of the humans living within
the City of Force. He flees with them, taking with him two rings of
force with which he can tap into the extradimensional energy reservoir
that supplies the Spheres, vowing to use them to reestablish Mankind as
a potent adversary to the Spheres.
It's obvious how Galouye could have used this as the basis for a longer
work.
len.
|
425.48 | re: .47/.35/.46 | STIKNY::GUENTHER | | Fri Apr 16 1993 07:26 | 11 |
| re: .47
Based on your synopsis, the Lord of the Psychon has little in common
with the short story other than the "psychon". I'm rereading the novel
and I'll checkout the story too. The novel has to do with an Army
Captain "fighting" the spheres to prevent Earth from being transferred
into another dimension. This book seems to combine Mad Max's milieu
with Varley's invaders ( or rather may have been the seminal work for
them ). Another related work might be William Tenn's Men in Walls.
/alan
|
425.49 | | WLW::KIER | My grandchildren are the NRA! | Fri Apr 16 1993 10:58 | 8 |
| > Another related work might be William Tenn's Men in Walls.
>
> /alan
I believe this is the same book I have by Tenn with the title
_Of Men and Monsters_. One of my all-time favorites.
Mike
|
425.50 | re: replies to .35 | COUNT0::WELSH | Think it through | Tue May 25 1993 08:49 | 5 |
| Thanks people, I am convinced you have cracked it. Consider
me a converted sceptic, this topic is a brilliant example of
group-think.
/Tom
|
425.51 | | STIKNY::GUENTHER | | Thu May 27 1993 18:46 | 4 |
| re: .50
Great, but which answer was the one one you were looking for? /alan
|
425.52 | Phantom armed man ? | GUCCI::EWISE | Pobodys Nerfect | Fri Jun 25 1993 11:33 | 9 |
| I am looking for a title and autoor af a book/story/series.
It is about a space cop style man with a phantom arm.
He can do things like reach through a wall and flick a swithc
on the other side.
Efw
|
425.53 | Gil the Arm, created by Larry Niven | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:06 | 8 |
| You are looking for the stories about "Gil the Arm" by Larry Niven.
Punnishly, Gil is an agent for A.R.M., a police force for the U.N.
He is the narrator and hero of the novel "The Patchwork Girl" and of
several other short stories and novelettes. I believe there is an
anthology of the short works, entitled "The Long A.R.M. of Gil
Hamilton."
Earl Wajenberg
|
425.54 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Escapes,Lies,Truth,Passion,Miracles | Fri Jun 25 1993 13:58 | 4 |
| There are other Gil the ARM stories in other volumes of Niven's
"Known Space" series.
andrew
|