Guardians of the Tower
Jon didn’t know why he held a sword in his hand to fend off the Wild Ones; he knew only that he was one of many who for centuries had become—
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Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine, Vol. 32, No. 2, January 1973
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Sslaughter on Dornel IV
Fighting an alien champ was always risky business for an Earthman. So Filmore decided he might pick up a pointer or two before the big—
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The Best Policy
From Robert Silverberg’s “Earthmen and Strangers” anthology, 1966:When human beings begin to encounter strangers in the universe, conflict is likely to erupt. Earthmen, by and large, are an aggressive sort of people, and it would not be surprising to run into a race of equally aggressive, militaristic creatures Out There. This could produce a nasty crash as one culture meets the other in a head-on impact.However, one feature of alien beings is their alienness: They are not likely to think the way we do. This story suggests, in a deliciously deadpan way, how a suitably clever human can befuddle and bamboozle his extraterrestrial captors simply by telling the truth. Randall Garrett, who wrote it, is a bearded, booming-voiced man who now makes his home in Texas and who has spent considerable time studying the art of creating confusion without exactly lying. His high-spirited stories have been appearing in science fiction’s leading magazines since 1944, with some time out for service with the United States Marine Corps.
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The Highest Treason
The highest treason of all is not so easy to define—and be it noted carefully that the true traitor in this case was not singular, but very plural…
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The Judas Valley
Why did everybody step off the ship in this strange valley and promptly drop dead? How could a well-equipped corps of tough spacemen become a field of rotting skeletons in this quiet world of peace and contentment? It was a mystery Peter and Sherri had to solve. If they could live long enough!
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