Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Analog June 2010

June's issue contained 3 Novelettes and 4 Short Stories, along with the various usual features. This was a good issue, run out and grab a copy!

"The Anunnaki Legacy", by Bond Elam was the lead and cover story this time. Suppose we discover that humanity was the result of genetic manipulation by an "ancient race", and suppose that ancient race was long gone leaving behind only tantalizing hints at their existance, much less their technology, culture...or very nature? That's the Anunnaki and we are their legacy...maybe. In this story, humans were being human, aliens were being alien, puzzles needed solving and a sense of wonder was everywhere you looked. Yep, this novelette was good enough to carry the entire issue and good enough for you to run out and grab a copy all by itself.

"Space Aliens Taught My Dog to Knit!", by Jerry Oltion & Elton Elliott kept me laughing. I guessed the ending early, but that didn't matter because it was so much fun for the authors to get me there. Suppose the "crazies" are right and it really is all a great big conspiracy? Even so, with bumbling, stumbling, and all too humans running this great big conspiracy you know that sooner or later the National Inquirer is going to break the story...right? Read and enjoy!

"Heist", by Tracy Canfield was a detection/puzzle story with King Solomon thrown in. Take nanotechlogy and 3D fabbers and now just what makes a rarity a rarity? And how do you tell the original from the replacant when there is no difference, except in the mind of the owner?

"At Last the Sun", by Richard Foss wasn't about the BP spill, but it came out right in the middle of that disaster and how could I not make the connection? Another First Contact story inside an environmental tale inside a slice of Gulf Coastal life. I live here, the BP disaster is my people's disaster. This story isn't about spilling oil, but it is about the ruination of a people's culture...maybe two people's culture...

"Cargo", by Michael F. Flynn asks the question, "What makes a Dark Age?" Flynn is one of the authors you go to for "alternate past" fiction, but here he gives us an alternate future story. This is truly an idea story with a very slim...but very attractively shaped...wrapper of plot around it.

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