Short SF is the website where I review every Science Fiction Short Story anthology and collection that I read.

Austin Beeman

The Great SF Stories Volume 1, 1939.  edited by Isaac Asimov and Martin H. Greenberg.  1979

The Great SF Stories Volume 1, 1939. edited by Isaac Asimov and Martin H. Greenberg. 1979

1939 is seen as the start of science fiction’s Golden Age with the start of John W. Campbell’s editorship of Astounding Magazine. This collection is the first in a series of retrospective collections highlighting the editors’ picks for best of the year.

This collection is ostensibly the selections of Isaac Asimov, but is most liked dominated by Martin H. Greenberg with Asimov contributing short paragraphs that bring his personal perspective on the stories and their authors. There is a lot of perspective on offer since this collection was assembled in 1979.

Despite a few iconic stories (Black Destroyer, Heavy Planet, I Robot), this isn’t a great collection. Many of the stories are difficult to appreciate in 2020. Some are too silly and fantastic. Some have outdated ideas about women. Some are minor stories by authors who go on to do much better work later.

The Great Stories Volume 1, 1939 is rated 73%.

1 great / 12 good / 3 average / 0 poor / 4 DNF.

How do I arrive at a rating?

  1. "I, Robot" by Eando Binder

    Good. One of the earliest robot stories with a strong parallels to Frankenstein. Smart and clever. Unrelated to the Isaac Asimov robot collection of the same name.

  2. "The Strange Flight of Richard Clayton" by Robert Bloch

    Good. A space launch and a broken instrument board makes one man’s space voyage very difficult.

  3. "Trouble With Water" by Horace L. Gold

    DNF. Fantasy story about a gnome that controls water and swims with his ears.

  4. "Cloak of Aesir" by Don A. Stuart

    DNF. Powerful matriarchs who own the earth talk about their interactions with a all black human. Boring and maybe racist.

  5. "The Day is Done" by Lester del Rey

    Good. A touching story about the last neanderthal at the end of his life.

  6. "The Ultimate Catalyst" by John Taine

    Average. Scientist fools a dictator in the Amazon by injecting snake blood into fruit.

  7. "The Gnarly Man" by L. Sprague de Camp

    Good. The strange long life of a circus performer brings out the worst in a number of scientists.

  8. "Black Destroyer" by A. E. van Vogt

    Great. A masterpiece of a thriller told in alternating viewpoints. An intelligent cat-like monster stalks a spaceship full of explorers who arrive to investigate a dead civilization. Suspenseful, smart, violent, and propulsive.

  9. "Greater Than Gods" by C. L. Moore

    Good. A man must choice between two women for marriage, but messages from the future far futures show that each path leads to disaster and dystopia

  10. "Trends" by Isaac Asimov

    Good. Scientist who wants to travel to space must fight against fundamentalist anti-science furor.

  11. "The Blue Giraffe" by L. Sprague De Camp

    Good. A creative story of a man who must investigate an African wildlife preserve where all the animals are experiencing extreme mutations.

  12. "The Misguided Halo" by Henry Kuttner

    DNF. Fantasy tale of a man who accidentally gets a halo from an angel.

  13. "Heavy Planet" by Milton A. Rothman

    Good. Awesome and action-packed story. On Heavyplanet, one man tries to salvage a ship that crashed into the ocean. It might hold secrets for flight and even space travel if it isn’t destroyed by a competing country.

  14. "Life-Line" by Robert A. Heinlein

    Good. A scientist invents a machine that can predict the moment of a person’s death. Obviously, this gets him into all kinds of trouble.

  15. "Ether Breather" by Theodore Sturgeon

    Average. Live color television isn’t accurately depicting what the cameras were pointing at.

  16. "Pilgrimage" by Nelson Bond

    Good. In the far future, a young woman goes on a pilgrimage to become the Great Mother of her people. Along the way she meets a man unlike any in her world. He might hold the key to this planet’s past.

  17. "Rust" by Joseph E. Kelleam

    Good. Melancholy story of war robots after there are no wars left.

  18. "The Four-Sided Triangle" by William F. Temple

    Average. Scientist tries to settle a love-triangle by reproducing the woman involved.

  19. "Star Bright" by Jack Williamson

    DNF. Man wishes - and recieves - the power to create things with his mind.

  20. "Misfit" by Robert A. Heinlein

    Good. A group of misfit young men are part of a military crew sent for grueling work on an asteroid.

World's Best Science Fiction 1967.  Edited by Donald A Wollheim and Terry Carr

World's Best Science Fiction 1967. Edited by Donald A Wollheim and Terry Carr

Year's Best SF.  edited by David G. Hartwell.  1996

Year's Best SF. edited by David G. Hartwell. 1996