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Caution beware the menace of the machine: a man is murdered by an automaton built for playing chess; a computer system designed to arbitrate justice develops a taste for iron-fisted, fatal rulings; an AI wreaks havoc on society after removing all censorship from an early form of the internet. Assembled with pieces by SF giants such as Isaac Asimov and Brian W. Aldiss as well as the less familiar but no less influential input of earlier science fiction pioneers, this collection of classic tales contains telling lessons for humankind's gradual march towards life alongside the thinking machine.… (altro)
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This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress, Blogspot, & Librarything by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission
Title: Menace of the Machine Series: British Library Science Fiction Classics Editor: Mike Ashley Rating: 3 of 5 Stars Genre: SF Pages: 257 Words: 95.5K
Synopsis:
Table of Contents
Moxon’s Master
Ambrose Bierce
The Discontented Machine
Adeline Knapp
Ely’s Automatic Housemaid
Elizabeth Bellamy
The Mind Machine
Michael Williams
Automata
S. Fowler Wright
The Machine Stops
E. M. Forster
Efficiency
Perley Poore Sheehan & Robert H. Davis
Rex
Harl Vincent
Danger in the Dark Cave
J. J. Connington
The Evitable Conflict
Isaac Asimov
Two-Handed Engine
C. L. Moore & Henry Kuttner
But Who Can Replace a Man?
Brian W. Aldiss
A Logic Named Joe
Will F. Jenkins
Dial F For Frankenstein
Arthur C. Clarke
My Thoughts:
I had not read, or even heard of, 3/4's of these stories, so this was a good collection to expand my knowledge of classic SF. Considering that some them date back to the 1890's, that's as classic as you can get! Of course, there was also a reason I had not heard of most of these.
While not universally depressing, the tone is definitely set by the title. I had to remind myself several times that this was not a collection about the indomitableness of the human spirit but what humanity could let itself in for. It was interesting to see how almost every single author believed that man's creation was somehow greater than mankind and they blithely threw out statements about how complicated and wonderful the machines were and how simple and primitive the human body was. It really showed a complete lack of understanding about biology and an acceptance of the roar of evolution that was just coming into being then.
The biggest reason this got 3 stars from me and no higher was because of the fething editor sticking in his nose. Just like in the collection Worst Contact, this editor (Mike Ashley) has a little chat with the reader about the author of the upcoming story. Maybe that works for a lot of people but when I saw that on the first story I gritted my teeth and groaned. Then when I saw it for the second story I knew this was going to be the format. Unfortunately, I am not disciplined enough to skip them and besides, why should “I” have to skip them, why didn't the editor skip them? I believe I used a lot of words in my head like sycophant, lickspittle, buttkisser and useless sod. Instead of allowing me to read the stories and judge on their own merit, Ashley has to include a bunch of data that ruined the whole experience for me. Besides ruining the flow the collection! I've got 4 or 5 more of these British Library series edited by Ashley and I'm going to do my hardest to skip his idiotic blathering and useless drivel and generally disgusting toejam munching.
To summarize, the stories were enjoyable on a variety of levels but the editorializing ruined the whole thing for me.
Caution beware the menace of the machine: a man is murdered by an automaton built for playing chess; a computer system designed to arbitrate justice develops a taste for iron-fisted, fatal rulings; an AI wreaks havoc on society after removing all censorship from an early form of the internet. Assembled with pieces by SF giants such as Isaac Asimov and Brian W. Aldiss as well as the less familiar but no less influential input of earlier science fiction pioneers, this collection of classic tales contains telling lessons for humankind's gradual march towards life alongside the thinking machine.
Title: Menace of the Machine
Series: British Library Science Fiction Classics
Editor: Mike Ashley
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 257
Words: 95.5K
Synopsis:
Table of Contents
Moxon’s Master
Ambrose Bierce
The Discontented Machine
Adeline Knapp
Ely’s Automatic Housemaid
Elizabeth Bellamy
The Mind Machine
Michael Williams
Automata
S. Fowler Wright
The Machine Stops
E. M. Forster
Efficiency
Perley Poore Sheehan & Robert H. Davis
Rex
Harl Vincent
Danger in the Dark Cave
J. J. Connington
The Evitable Conflict
Isaac Asimov
Two-Handed Engine
C. L. Moore & Henry Kuttner
But Who Can Replace a Man?
Brian W. Aldiss
A Logic Named Joe
Will F. Jenkins
Dial F For Frankenstein
Arthur C. Clarke
My Thoughts:
I had not read, or even heard of, 3/4's of these stories, so this was a good collection to expand my knowledge of classic SF. Considering that some them date back to the 1890's, that's as classic as you can get! Of course, there was also a reason I had not heard of most of these.
While not universally depressing, the tone is definitely set by the title. I had to remind myself several times that this was not a collection about the indomitableness of the human spirit but what humanity could let itself in for. It was interesting to see how almost every single author believed that man's creation was somehow greater than mankind and they blithely threw out statements about how complicated and wonderful the machines were and how simple and primitive the human body was. It really showed a complete lack of understanding about biology and an acceptance of the roar of evolution that was just coming into being then.
The biggest reason this got 3 stars from me and no higher was because of the fething editor sticking in his nose. Just like in the collection Worst Contact, this editor (Mike Ashley) has a little chat with the reader about the author of the upcoming story. Maybe that works for a lot of people but when I saw that on the first story I gritted my teeth and groaned. Then when I saw it for the second story I knew this was going to be the format. Unfortunately, I am not disciplined enough to skip them and besides, why should “I” have to skip them, why didn't the editor skip them? I believe I used a lot of words in my head like sycophant, lickspittle, buttkisser and useless sod. Instead of allowing me to read the stories and judge on their own merit, Ashley has to include a bunch of data that ruined the whole experience for me. Besides ruining the flow the collection! I've got 4 or 5 more of these British Library series edited by Ashley and I'm going to do my hardest to skip his idiotic blathering and useless drivel and generally disgusting toejam munching.
To summarize, the stories were enjoyable on a variety of levels but the editorializing ruined the whole thing for me.
★★★☆☆ ( )