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Robots Have No Tails (Trade Paperback)
Paizo Publishing, LLC
by Henry Kuttner, with an introduction by F. Paul Wilson
Hounded by creditors and heckled by an uncooperative robot, a binge-drinking inventor must solve the mystery of his own machines before his dodgy financing and reckless lifestyle
catch up to him.
This complete collection of Kuttner’s five classic "Gallegher" stories presents the author at the height of his imaginative genius. A foreword by popular modern novelist F. Paul Wilson (Repairman Jack, The Keep) provides an entertaining introduction to some of the greatest humorous science fiction ever published in the pulps!
120-page softcover trade paperback
ISBN-13: 978-1-60125-153-4
Contents:
- "...But They Do Have Tales" (introduction by F. Paul Wilson)
- "Introduction" (by C.L. Moore)
- "Time Locker"
- "The World is Mine"
- "The Proud Robot"
- "Gallegher Plus"
- "Ex Machina"
About the Author
Ray Bradbury once referred to Henry Kuttner as "a neglected master... a man who shaped science fiction and fantasy in its most important years." Born in Los Angeles, Henry Kuttner (1915–1958) sold his first story, "The Graveyard Rats," to Weird Tales in 1936, the same year in which he wrote a fan letter to rising science fiction author C.L. Moore, mistakenly believing her to be a man. The two were married in 1940, and in the years that followed they collaborated constantly, publishing under at least 17 pseudonyms, most notably Lewis Padgett and Keith Hammond. Along with Elak of Atlantis and Prince Raynor, both of which were created before his marriage to Moore, Kuttner's most popular solo works were the Gallegher stories, tales about an inventor who could only build robots while drunk, and who upon sobering immediately forgot their purposes. As a friend of H.P. Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith, Kuttner also contributed several stories to the Cthulhu mythos. In addition to writing scripts for television in collaboration with Moore, Kuttner wrote several stories that have since been translated to film, most recently "Mimsy Were the Borogroves," released as The Last Mimsy. In the years since his untimely death from a heart attack at 43, Kuttner has been cited as an influence by everyone from Marion Zimmer Bradley to Roger Zelazny, and both Richard Matheson and Ray Bradbury have dedicated novels to him.
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Product Reviews
Average product rating:
   
(4.8)
based on
5
reviews
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review.
I swear. No one knows how to write a short story. They like to write brief moments of wonder and perhaps hope and dreams, but there is never any oompf for its conclusion. Its as if they put forth a page from their WIP novel. Here we have a master showing everyone just what an audience wants from a Short Story. Study this book well writers, the short story form done right can be very powerful.
A really nice book with stories you can't put down until you are done. I laughed out laud, and thoroughly loved the way the stories end, when Gallegher finally figures it out.
I like the new format too, the interior art is nicely done, and I like the columns.
Yet another Author I've never read before and now love.
A collection of stories about a whacky future inventor who can invent crazy stuff like time machines, but only when he is drunk enough to let his subconscious come out and take a crack at it. The problem is that he is the get so smashed he can't remembers what he has done kind of drunk.
The future as seen from the 1940s, of course. So, you have 3-D tv, computers, but nothing like communications now. Retina printing, though.
Time machines, annoying robots, little furry guys from the future who want to take over the world, and other silliness is to be found here.
I find them amusing, but not hilarious.
Robots Have No Tails : Time Locker - Henry Kuttner
Robots Have No Tails : The World is Mine - Henry Kuttner
Robots Have No Tails : The Proud Robot - Henry Kuttner
Robots Have No Tails : Gallegher Plus - Henry Kuttner
Robots Have No Tails : Ex Machina - Henry Kuttner
This group of stories are alot of fun to read. They have some pretty twisted twists. I really enjoyed Joe and his multiple senses. I am having friends read this because I enjoyed it so much.
This collection was first published in hardcover format in 1952 by specialty press publisher Gnome Press. You can check out the full review on my blog: gnomepress.wordpress.com/2009/03/04/review-robots-have-no-tails/
Product Discussion
20
posts.
See all discussion for this product.
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If I saw this book in a bookstore without knowing anything about Henry Kuttner, I wouldn’t even pick it up. Why? The cover art.
If it’s not too late, I’d suggest a different cover illustration. One with more of a feeling of science fiction, imagination, and fun than a big white head can convey.
Many of your other book covers are very reminiscent of the pulps, I like that a lot. It gives this series a classic feel.
This set of Kuttner stories, some of Kuttner’s best, deserves a better cover.
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Theris Nordo Ichka wrote:
If I saw this book in a bookstore without knowing anything about Henry Kuttner, I wouldn’t even pick it up. Why? The cover art.
If it’s not too late, I’d suggest a different cover illustration. One with more of a feeling of science fiction, imagination, and fun than a big white head can convey.
Many of your other book covers are very reminiscent of the pulps, I like that a lot. It gives this series a classic feel.
This set of Kuttner stories, some of Kuttner’s best, deserves a better cover.
All the books from Outlaws of Mars (Feb 2009) on have mock-up covers at the moment, I assume this is no exception (though I've no idea where it's from, I recognise all the others from Pathfinder). I totally agree that if the current art is final then it's kind of lame (if I saw that in a shop, I would assume serious, AI-based hard science fiction, and would probably pass it over unless I knew the author, plus it would look kind of out of place in a Planet Stories collection), but hopefully Paizo are coming up with something suitably awesome for the final thing and we'll see it in the next few months :).
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I like it. For me, it evokes the feeling of classic sci-fi that Kuttner, in part, represents. Just remember the old adage - "Never judge a book by its cover."
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This cover is a mock-up - we won't even ORDER the actual cover illustration for several weeks. Don't worry. :)
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We've just updated the product description with what I think is the actual cover. (Or at least a close mockup.)
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