Tomorrow, the Stars

Tomorrow, the Stars is an anthology of speculative fiction short stories, presented as edited by American author Robert A. Heinlein and published in 1952.

Tomorrow, the Stars
Cover of first edition (hardcover)
EditorRobert A. Heinlein
IllustratorRichard M. Powers
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherDoubleday Books
Publication date
1952
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages249

Heinlein wrote a six-page introduction in which he discussed the nature of science fiction, speculative fiction, escapist stories, and literature. None of the stories had previously been anthologized.

According to science fiction historian Bud Webster, Heinlein's introduction and name on the book were his sole contributions; the actual selection of the stories, and the work involved in arranging for their publication, was done by Frederik Pohl and Judith Merril. This is confirmed by Virginia Heinlein in Grumbles from the Grave (without mentioning Pohl or Merril) and by Pohl in chapter 6 of his autobiography, The Way the Future Was.[1] However, the correspondence between Heinlein and Merril, now housed in Library and Archives Canada, shows that while Heinlein claimed to be uninvolved in the editing, he certainly had some input into the structure and contents of the book:

I am the lowest form of literary prostitute, swindling the public into thinking that I have done a piece of editing which I aint done and aint going to do ... On the issue of whether or not the volume should have a theme: I don’t give a hoot about a theme; I’d like to see stories picked for highest possible entertainment value. I can’t think of any other real excuse for putting out another S-F anthology ... I'll be of more help, I hope, a month from now when I can get at my files of magazines and books.[2]

The Stories

Editions

It was published in 1952 in hardcover by Doubleday and Company, Inc., published 1953 in paperback. The Library of Congress Control Number of the hardcover was 52-5218.

Reception

P. Schuyler Miller found the stories to be "all smoothly professional, all enjoyable, some of them mind-tickling."[3] Damon Knight judged that of the fourteen stories in the volume, "ten are A's, four B's; there are no stinkers at all", and asserted that each of the ten excellent stories "is a pretty good approximation of the last word on its subject."[4]

gollark: If I was better at hardware things and actually had money for an FPGA it would be cool to run SHA256 on it and probably beat all the foolish people with nondedicated hardware.
gollark: Which is already quite low because Krist gives blocks quite fast and there aren't many miners.
gollark: Mining pools don't give random people more money, they just reduce the variance.
gollark: It runs on a proof of work thing too I am pretty sure.
gollark: If it was 51% of nodes, people could just run 19471248916249812648126182618256125871875819201279857120581 nodes on one computer and explode everything.

References

  1. Del Rey 1978
  2. Letter from Heinlein to Merril and Pohl, 26 June 1951
  3. "The Reference Library", Astounding Science Fiction, August 1952, p.128
  4. Knight, Damon (1967), In Search of Wonder: Essays on Modern Science Fiction, Revised and Enlarged, Chicago: Advent, pp. 117–18

Sources

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