Category: 42 Word Retrospectives

Decoy

Decoy

by John Christopher (Science Fiction Stories, July 1955)

Magazine cover: Science Fiction Stories, July 1955

Not much of a (short) story. Christopher’s world-building hints at a complex near-future society worthy of greater exploration, but the characters are presented as if the reader should already be familiar with them. The result is an untethered, over-simple tale of matchmaking.

 

 

The Box of Delights

The Box of Delights

adapted by Alan Seymour; dir. Renny Rye (BBC, 1984)

DVD cover: The Box of Delights (BBC, 1984)

A nostalgic favourite, apparently, but perhaps you had to be there. The storytelling is bonkers, most of the adult cast are shamelessly overacting, and the villain dismisses the protagonist—quite rightly—as being too much of an exasperating squit to bother with.

 

 

Johnny and the Bomb

Johnny and the Bomb

by Terry Pratchett (Doubleday, 1996); audiobook read by Richard Mitchley (BBC Audiobooks, 1997)

Book cover: Johnny and the Bomb by Terry Pratchett

Pratchett gifts middle-grade readers the perfect introduction to time travel, albeit that his mid-1990s ‘now’ is itself receding into history, in rapid pursuit of the Second World War ‘then’. Thought-provoking and wryly funny, with memorable characters and a rich vein of dialogue.

 

 

Snoopy Treasury

Snoopy Treasury

by Charles M. Schulz (Book Club Associates, 1981)

Book cover: Snoopy Treasury by Schulz

A large-format book combining much of “Peanuts Treasury” (1960s dailies and Sundays, black and white) with the colour Sundays from “Sandlot Peanuts” (1960s-1970s baseball themed). The result is nearly 200 pages of wit and wisdom, somewhat lopsided in favour of Charlie Brown.

 

 

A Touch of Diphtheria

A Touch of Diphtheria

by Roger MacBride Allen (Analog, February 1993)

Magazine cover: Analog Science Fiction and Fact, February 1993

An odd SF novelette told with workmanlike prose and involving a convoluted crime within several layers of deception; also, an intergalactic murder investigation where the protagonist does no investigating. She merely intuits the solution behind closed doors and plots a big reveal.

 

 

The Twelve Million Dollar Note

The Twelve Million Dollar Note and Other Strange But True Sea Stories

by Robert Kraske (Scholastic, 1977)

Book cover: The Twelve Million Dollar Note by Robert Kraske

A miscellany of tales about messages washed ashore in bottles. There is little cohesion to the collection, nor academic rigour applied in establishing each story’s veracity, yet the accounts are easy to read and pitched to fire the imaginations of middle-grade students.

 

 

Asterix and the Magic Carpet

Asterix and the Magic Carpet

by Albert Uderzo; trans. Anthea Bell & Derek Hockridge (Hodder, 1988)

Book cover: Asterix and the Magic Carpet by Uderzo.

A breezy if inconsequential adventure. Uderzo sends his heroes on a tour of the ancient world and depicts India for the first time, his illustrations proving less cluttered and less exotically Eastern than those of Jean Tabary’s Iznogoud (which gets a shout-out).

 

 

Derelict Space Sheep