Thanks for trying.
ChatGPT knows exactly which story I’m talking about, except gives it a completely wrong title and author:
“What science fiction short story featured a gigantic alien spaceship hundreds of miles high causing catastrophe when it landed on Earth?”
"The science fiction short story you may be thinking of is “The Great C” by Philip K. Dick. In this story, a massive alien spaceship arrives on Earth and lands in the middle of North America, causing widespread destruction and chaos.
The spaceship, known as the Great C, is so large that it extends hundreds of miles into the sky. As it comes to a stop on the ground, it creates massive earthquakes and alters the Earth’s gravitational field, causing further damage and disruption.
The story follows the efforts of the government to investigate and understand the alien craft, as well as the reactions of various people to the arrival of the Great C. Without giving away too much of the plot, the story explores themes of power, authority, and the nature of reality."
The story is similar to but not quite the same as “Heresies of the Huge God” by Brian Aldiss.
Based on the successful resolution of my 12 year old Sci-Fi ID thread here, I want to give this open mystery one final bump. I feel like we’re on a roll here, and that which could not be identified in 2011 and again in 2020 might now be primed and ready for an answer.
Cuckoo’s Egg by C J Cherryh
Never mind, I see it was answered, and anyway the question was 14 years old.
Interesting that Haldeman was mentioned…cause it has elements of Forever War but not all together.
When they train on Charon or Pluto, they have to wait on a real life training attack and part of it is just sitting and sitting and sitting (So many Vietnam analogies in the novel) then finally when the attack starts they have to hit a button and let the computer handle the rest
Later when they face real-life aliens a hypno-trigger phrase is said so they become killing machines.
And get to hear a cool Scottish song, too: Scots Wha Hae- Braveheart - YouTube
There is a small series of two books, maybe more Fantasy than SF.
The protagonist is a regular more or less London guy, but somehow he stumbles into a pirate bar. he makes friends with one of the waitresses. Then he finds she has been kidnapped and sailed out of ken. So he buys a ship and a crew and sails after her…
I feel bad about not recognizing this one. Do you have any other recollections about ut?
The guy is an everyman who turns inot a hero of soarts, there are supernatural elements. In the 2nd one, there are voodoo elements.
What about barbie?
Nah, he said he was a London guy, not Brisbane.
When did you read them? Approximately when was the story set? Are there fantastic elements in the story? What are they?
Pretty sure it’s Chase the Morning (1990) by Michael Scott Rohan. Good fun, although I thought the sequel, The Gates of Noon, wasn’t as good. There was also 3rd in the series , Cloud Castles, which was better, imho.
Just adding a picture of the cover.
Do we do horror stories here, too? There’s a book I’d like to reread about an evil spirit loose in Ireland…
I can’t see anyone objecting. Ask away. Give any details you can remember.
1970’s or so (which is when the book was written or maybe the 1980s) London.
The protagonists finds out that yes, there is an alternate world you can get to with pirates, voodoo and such.
That’s the one! Thanks!
Evil spirit is released from a grave near Cork, in southern Ireland. It somehow travels north (to Dublin?), where it takes a woman prisoner. Ties a very tight tourniquet around one arm, then starts removing flesh, all the way to bare bone. Does this with the other arm, then (I think) starts on the legs. No idea how, but the good guy tracks it down. Final battle between good guy and evil spirit, IIRC, is on a beach, possibly in the North.
Paperback novel, not a novella or shorter story. Read it around 1999-2000.
I have a reverse question. I’m looking for an upbeat, utopian story or novel where things mostly work. Ursula Le Guin isn’t that author. The only thing I know is Eric Frank Russell’s novella, “And Then There Were None,” written in the 1950s. I’m hoping for something suitable for 18-24 year olds that they can read quickly but isn’t YA exactly, or at least not the type of YA that will turn off university students. Any ideas, anyone?
@Andy_L ?
@NinthAcolyte ?