Sujet : Re: (Tears) Mutant by Henry Kuttner & C L Moore
De : robertaw (at) *nospam* drizzle.com (Robert Woodward)
Groupes : rec.arts.sf.writtenDate : 12. Nov 2024, 18:48:02
Autres entêtes
Organisation : home user
Message-ID : <robertaw-F9A9E1.09480112112024@news.individual.net>
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In article <
lpf1moF2ti4U1@mid.individual.net>,
ted@loft.tnolan.com (Ted Nolan <tednolan>) wrote:
In article <lpf16oF2kstU1@mid.individual.net>,
Ted Nolan <tednolan> <tednolan> wrote:
In article <robertaw-7E8ABC.10115911112024@news.individual.net>,
Robert Woodward <robertaw@drizzle.com> wrote:
In article <lperdhF1tglU2@mid.individual.net>,
ted@loft.tnolan.com (Ted Nolan <tednolan>) wrote:
>
In article <vgta58$11om5$3@dont-email.me>,
Tony Nance <tnusenet17@gmail.com> wrote:
On 11/10/24 8:59 AM, James Nicoll wrote:
Mutant by Henry Kuttner & C L Moore
Given time, the Baldies will peacefully supplant Homo Sapiens. Time
is something the Baldies may not have.
https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/drink-to-the-course-of-evolution
>
Oh my - mentally preparing for Hogbens would make for some interesting
whiplash when reading just about anything else.
>
After reading your fine review, I have been puzzled over why Mutant
doesn't seem familiar. After a search through the letter K[1] in my
collection, it's clearly because I've never read any of the Baldy
stories. Ha!
>
Which I will remedy when I get the opportunity.
Tony
[1] and M, and O, and P, of course
>
If you liked the Hogbens, I believe Leinster wrote a somewhat similar
series of stories about a rural gas-station owner, technical savant..
>
?! I have read a good deal of Leinster, but I don't remember seeing any
stories like that. Now there was a long running series of stories in
Popular Science about a "Model Garage" whose owner (Gus Wilson) was
really good at fixing automobiles, but the best I can tell, the "author"
of the stories was a house name.
>
>
No I recall the "Model Garage" stories, and this was definitely not them.
>
However looking at isfdb, I don't see any likely titles, so perhaps I'm
wrong and this is a YASID.
>
As I recall the premise, our narrator was a guy who solved technical
problems for a living, and he discovered there was this other guy with an
auto-shop/gas station/garage somewhere out in the country who was too
lazy to fix things the normal way and could solve any technical problem
without realizing it as impossible. I think one example was an engine
that had seized up, and he did something with a battery that neutralized
all friction inside the mechanism to get it going again. I believe
there were several stories, and the narrator would bring him problems
without indicating that they were important and that nobody else had
any idea what to do.
>
If that wasn't Leinster, I'd like to know who it was...
--
No, wait a second. It looks like it's the stories in: _Out Of This World_
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Out_of_This_World_(Leinster_book)
(checks the ISFDB) I have never read the Bud Gregory stories which is
why I didn't recognize your description.
-- "We have advanced to new and surprising levels of bafflement."Imperial Auditor Miles Vorkosigan describes progress in _Komarr_.�-----------------------------------------------------Robert Woodward robertaw@drizzle.com