"The Steiger Effect" is a science fiction short story by Betsy Curtis. It was first published in Analog Science Fiction in October 1968.

Synopsis

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Human merchants sell internal combustion engines to a planet whose inhabitants view the devices as magic — and when the humans leave, the engines stop working, because internal combustion only functions in the presence of a psionic field unknowingly emitted by humans.

Reception

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"The Steiger Effect" was a finalist for the 1969 Hugo Award for Best Short Story.[1]

Galactic Journey noted that "'Humans secretly have psi powers and don't know it' certainly sounds like a plot tailor-made for [Analog editor] Campbell", and observed that the aliens' social stratification ("Men" who use their minds, and "Boys" who use their muscle) was uncomfortably evocative of "antebellum days in the American South".[2]

Title

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Historian Maggie Thompson – Curtis's daughter – has described the story's premise as "there are people who have a sort of 'repairing field' [said Steiger Effect] around them – which is why, for example, your car runs fine when you have it at the service station but renews the grinding noise after you've driven away", and noted that "[o]ur local service station was run by Mr. Steiger."[3]

References

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  1. ^ 1969 Hugo Awards, at TheHugoAwards.org
  2. ^ September 30, 1968 - A spoonful of sugar… (October 1968 Analog), by Gideon Marcus, at Galactic Journey; published September 30, 2023; retrieved May 1, 2024
  3. ^ Resistentialism, posted by Maggie Thompson to the A Way with Words forum, October 7, 2008; via archive.org