"Henry Kuttner - Private Eye" - читать интересную книгу автора (Kuttner Henry)PRIVATE EYE
by тАЬLewis PadgettтАЭ (Henry Kuttner, 1914-1958 and C.L. Moore, 1911- ; this story is generally believed to have been written by Kuttner) Astounding Science Fiction, January The Kuttners were so prolific that they made extensive use of pen namesтАФin addition to Kuttner and Moore, singly and listed together, they wrote as тАЬLewis PadgettтАЭ and as тАЬLawrence OтАЩDonnell,тАЭ producing important stories under both of these pseudonyms. The present selection is the first of three in this bookтАФthe late 1940s were tremendously produc-tive for this wonderful writing team. As Isaac points out, тАЬPrivate EyeтАЭ is a classic blend of mystery and science fiction and fully deserves the title of тАЬclassic.тАЭ It is not now unusual for such combinations to see print; indeed, in the last twenty years dozens of stories in-corporating a murder mystery with sf have appeared, and many have been collected in such anthologies as Miriam Allen deFordтАЩs Space, Time & Crime (1964), Barry N. Malzberg and Bill PronziniтАЩs wonderful Dark Sins, Dark Crimes (1978), and our own (along with Charles G. Waugh) The 13 Crimes of Science Fiction (1979).тАФM.H.G. (John Campbell, the greatest of all science fiction editors, was one peculiar blind spots. For instance, during the 1940тАЩs he frequently maintained that science fiction mysteries were impossible, because it was so easy to use futuristic gimmicks to help the detective crack his case. I eventually showed, in 1953, that a classic mystery could be combined with science fiction if one simply set up the boundary conditions at the start and stuck to them. I reso-lutely allowed no futuristic gimmicks to appear suddenly and give the detective an unfair advantage. In тАЬPrivate EyeтАЭ however, Henry Kuttner [preceding me by four years] took the harder task of allowing a futuristic gimmickтАФone that would seem to make it impossible to get away with murderтАФand then labored to produce an honest murder mystery anyway. The result was an undoubted classicтАФI.A.) **** The forensic sociologist looked closely at the image on the wall screen. Two figures were frozen there, one in the act of stabbing the other through the heart with an antique letter cutter, once used at Johns Hopkins for surgery. That was before the ultra-microtome, of course. |
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