Mmm. Helen McCloy’s Number Ten Q Street, thorny?
Understood.
That seems right - here’s a link to that story
and further info What's the Name of That Book??? - SOLVED: Adult Fiction: SOLVED. Science fiction(?) - someone visits Q St to buy real steak [s] Showing 1-11 of 11
Got it!
The whole story’s not there in the link; but the excerpt has very much the flavor* of what I remember. And its being in Ellery Queen makes perfect sense – my mother subscribed to that and I read it also. And in 1963 I would have been 12.
Thanks!
( realized after having written “very much the flavor” that the choice of words was probably influenced by the story -)
Hey, I posted in that Goodreads thread!
In high school, late 80s to early 90s I read a short story. I’m pretty sure it was from a sci-fi/fantasy anthology book, but I can’t be certain. If not it must have been from a magazine. A man encounters an old guy on New Years Eve who tells him he’s the avatar of the preceding year. He will die at midnight and be replaced by a newborn who will live their entire life over the course of the next year. He thinks he’s just a nut job and doesn’t make much of it at first. But then his pregnant wife gives birth at exactly midnight and now he thinks his baby is Baby New Year.
That sounds familiar, but only because I think I’ve seen someone else looking for it. Sorry.
Here’s an identification question:
Story (rather sexist as I remember it, in the casually sexist way of many old stories) in which Things Are Going Wrong and the protagonist takes his girlfriend out to the country to hole up somewhere relatively safe while things go to hell all over the place. Or maybe she becomes his girlfriend in the course of the story and starts off as somebody he met while trying to get away – I think one of the weird things that keeps happening is that people are taking their clothes off in public for no apparent reason and maybe she’s one of them and in a Gentlemanly Fashion he wraps her up in something?
The protagonist talks about things working in cycles and a lot of different cycles have coincided at a bad point.
In any case, everything seems to be finally improving, most of the cycles are moving into better territory, protagonist is starting to think that they’re going to make it after all.
And then he realizes something astronomical is about to happen, and everybody’s Utterly Doomed.
This isn’t something recent, but I don’t remember how old – might be anywhere from 1940’s to 1980’s, I think.
The Year of the Jackpot, by Robert Heinlein http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?56242
ETA: Your memory is correct - the hero (mathematician) meets the girlfriend when she strips in public (part of a cycle of strange behavior).
Thanks, Andy L; I found a pdf, and that’s definitely it.
– hey, it’s got a reference to Chief Justice Roberts. Accidental prescience –
No problem - I like the ones I can answer off the top of my head.
Story
Anybody?
Half of this sounds like David Brin’s Coexistence (also published under the title “River of Time”) - it’s got the paralysis and one guy figuring it out, but the rest is not similar at all
Richard Matheson “Deadline”. Here’s some covers. The protagonist is a Doctor.
Cool. Thanks for finding that.
I’ve read much of Matheson’s short story output many times. The only stumbling block here was remembering the story title. (This one would have made a great Twilight Zone ep.)
Thanks. That’s a short story, though, and I remember it as a novel. The library doesn’t seem to have it, so I’ll have to wait for a used-book store to reopen to look for it.
I’ve been looking for a short story, likely a 1960s anthology paperback. Asimov’s magazine perhaps? Anyway, the story deals with a very wealthy man, who is kind of bored. He decides to collect the very best item out of every collectible category in existence.
I get confused here, but it seems he acquired something inhabited by tiny people? Somehow this lead to his demise. May be mixing up a couple stories, it’s only been a half century since I read it.
Asimov’s magazine didn’t start until the late 1970s. This bears some similarity to Henry Kuttner’s “Housing Problem” - and that story is collected in a collection called “Little People!” Publication: Little People!
I think this might be “None Before Me” by Sydney Carroll, which was included in an anthology edited by Ray Bradbury called Timeless Stories for Today and Tomorrow. It was reprinted several times in the 1960s.