The Last Hurrah of the Golden Horde is the first collection of science fiction stories by author Norman Spinrad. It was originally published by Nelson Doubleday in August 1970 with a Science Fiction Book Club edition and by Avon Books the following month.[1]
Author | Norman Spinrad |
---|---|
Cover artist | David Chestnutt |
Language | English |
Genre | Science fiction |
Publisher | Nelson Doubleday |
Publication date | July 1970 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (paperback) |
Pages | 223 pp |
OCLC | 4048462 |
The Last Hurrah of the Golden Horde placed eighth in the Locus Poll for best SF anthology or collection of the year.[2] Norman Spinrad himself recommended the collection for first-time readers of his work.[3]
Contents
edit- "Carcinoma Angels" (Dangerous Visions, 1967)
- "The Age of Invention" (F&SF 1966)
- "Outward Bound" (Analog 1964)
- "A Child of Mind" (Amazing 1965)
- "The Equalizer" (Analog 1964)
- "The Last of the Romany" (Analog 1963)
- "Technicality" (Analog 1966)
- "The Rules of the Road" (Galaxy 1964)
- "Dead End" (Galaxy 1969)
- "A Night in Elf Hill" (The Farthest Reaches 1968)
- "Deathwatch" (Playboy 1965)
- "The Ersatz Ego" (Amazing 1964)
- "Neutral Ground" (F&SF 1966)
- "Once More, with Feeling" (Knight 1969)
- "It’s a Bird! It’s a Plane!" (Gent 1967)
- "Subjectivity" (Analog 1964)
- "The Entropic Gang Bang Caper" (New Worlds 1969)
- "The Last Hurrah of the Golden Horde" (New Worlds 1969)
"The Ersatz Ego" was originally published as "Your Name Shall Be . . . Darkness."[4]
Reception
editReviewing the collection in Galaxy, Algis Budrys noted that "you become struck by Spinrad's breadth of awareness and by his ability to write a number of different styles well," but that "[Spinrad] never rises above the level of simple, straightforward competence." Budrys concluded that "alarmingly, it's taking Spinrad a very long time to stop synthesizing and start speaking with his own voice."[5]
References
edit- ^ isfdb Retrieved 09/01/2021.
- ^ 1971 Locus Poll Award
- ^ An Interview with Norman Spinrad, Anarchist, Science Fiction and Fantasy Writer's Association, 5 September 2011, retrieved 3 July 2024
- ^ Index to Science Fiction Anthologies and Collections
- ^ "Galaxy Bookshelf", Galaxy, February 1971, pp.117-18