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Analog Sep/Oct 2019

Analog Sep/Oct 2019

Analog Science Fiction and Fact (Astounding) Vol. 139 No. 9 & 10 Sep/Oct 2019
Contents
Allen M. Steele’s Guest Editorial: More Than One Way to Skin a Starship
Adam-Troy Castro “The Gorilla in a Tutu Principle or Pecan Pie at Minnie and Earl’s”
Albert Jackson & Gregory Benford’s Science Fact: Building a Gravitational Wave Trasmitter
Brenda Kalt “Awakening in the Anteroom of Heaven” art by Eldar Zakirov
Martin L. Shoemaker “On Her Shoulders”
Edward M. Lerner “Paradise Unbound”
Mario Milosevic “The Swarm”
In Times to Come
John G. Cramer’s The Alternate View: Bio-Reprogramming and Multi-Century Life Spans
G.O. Clark “Continuum” (verse)
Antha Ann Adkins “The Annual Argument at the De-Extinction Board Meeting”
Norman Spinrad “Personalized People”
Jennifer R. Povey “The Waters of a New World”
Sean Vivier “News from an Alien World”
Brendan DuBois “A Family Rendezvous”
Julie Novakova “From So Complex a Beginning” art by Tomislav Tikulin
Stanley Schmidt “Sequoias and Other Myths” (verse)
Christopher L. Bennett “Conventional Powers”
Phoebe Barton “A Square of Flesh, A Cube of Steel”
Christian Monson “Shut-Ins”
Ron Collins “I Dreamed You Were a Spaceship”
Richard A. Lovett’s Guest Alternate View: Looking for Signs of Ancient Earth . . . On the Moon
Michael F. Flynn “The Singing City”
Joe M. McDermott “Astroboy and Wind”
Marie Bilodeau “Molecular Rage”
Tony Ballantyne “Trespass”
Guy Stewart “Road Veterinarian” art by Josh Meehan
Don Sakers: The Reference Library
Brass Tacks (Letters)
Classified Marketplace
Anthony Lewis: Upcoming Events

Publisher: Peter Kanter
Editor: Trevor Quachri
Associate Editor: Emily Hockaday
Editorial Assistant: Deanna McLafferty
Senior Art Director: Victoria Green
Cover: Kurt Huggins
208 pages, $7.99 on newsstands until October 22, 2018
Analog website

SF Value Pack-8 $7.95
SF Double Issue Value Pack-12 $15.95
SF Value Pack-16 $12.95

Analog Sept. 1972

Analog Sept. 1972

Excerpt from Joe Wehrle, Jr.’s article on “The Telzey Amberdon Stories of James H. Schmitz” in The Digest Enthusiast No. 7:

The Symbiotes (Analog September 1972). Trigger Argee discovers an eight-inch tall man hiding among utensils on her restaurant lunch table. She helps him escape his pursuer and teams up with Telzey, but is captured when Telzey leaves to contact the Psychology Service for help, and wakes up later in a distant star system. Then begins an odyssey to escape and free the little people, during which she discovers she has latent, if limited, psionic abilities that she needs to cultivate for her own protection. After her adventure, Telzey assures her that being a functioning psi is not such a disadvantage. Reprinted in T’nT: Telzey and Trigger.

Baen Books Telzey Reprints

Psience Fiction

Analog March 1972

Excerpt from Joe Wehrle, Jr.’s article on “The Telzey Amberdon Stories of James H. Schmitz” in The Digest Enthusiast No. 7:

Child of the Gods (Analog March 1972). A dangerously accomplished psi takes control of Telzey’s mind when her guard is down, forcing her to deal with an alien creature that is causing disasters at his crystal mine on Maunafra. He is also illegally mining djeel, the oil which the alien needs to escape the planet on which it has been stranded—which is the root cause of the problem. Reprinted in T’nT: Telzey and Trigger.

Analog Jul/Aug 2019

Analog Jul/Aug 2019

Analog Science Fiction and Fact (Astounding) Vol. 139 No. 7 & 8 Jul/Aug 2019
Contents
Trevor Quachri’s Editorial: A Conspiracy of Dunces
The Analytical Laboratory (Reader’s Favorites)
Robert R. Chase “Vault” art by Eldar Zakirov
Ken Poyner “New Planet Landscape 6” (verse)
C. Stuart Hardwick’s Science Fact: Do We Still Need NASA?
Catherine Wells “The Quality of Mercy” art by Josh Meehan
Tom Jolly “Shooting Stars”
John J. Vester “A Life in Particle Archaeology”
In Times to Come
David L. Clements “Sailors of the Second Sun”
Buzz Dixon “Labor-Saving Relations”
John G. Cramer’s The Alternate View: Neutrino Relics from the Big Bang
Leo Vladimirsky “The Babbage Tour”
Phoebe North “All Tomorrow’s Parties” art by Vincent DiFate
Dan Reade “A Wonderful Thing to Say”
Robert Scherrer “Portle”
Paul Di Filippo “Monarch of the Feast”
Freya Marske “What We Named the Needle”
Leah Cypess “Uncommon”
Steve Rasnic Tem “Captain Zack & the Data Raiders”
Alison Wilgus “A Neighborhood for Someone Else”
Julie Novakova “Dreaming Up the Future”
Joe M. McDermott “Finnegan, Bring the Pain”
Eric James Stone “A Potential Application of Induced Resonance in a Four-Dimensional Crystal of Quantum Spacetime”
Nick Wolven “The Eyes of Alton Arnhauser”
Greg Egan “The Slipway”
Nelson Adrian Blish “Tesseract” (verse)
Don Sakers: The Reference Library
Brass Tacks (Letters)
Classified Marketplace
Anthony Lewis: Upcoming Events

Publisher: Peter Kanter
Editor: Trevor Quachri
Associate Editor: Emily Hockaday
Editorial Assistant: Deanna McLafferty
Senior Art Director: Victoria Green
Cover: Shutterstock.com
208 pages, $7.99 on newsstands until August 20, 2018
Analog website

SF Value Pack-8 $7.95
SF Double Issue Value Pack-12 $15.95
SF Value Pack-16 $12.95

Lion Game

Analog August 1971

Excerpt from Joe Wehrle, Jr.’s article on “The Telzey Amberdon Stories of James H. Schmitz” in The Digest Enthusiast No. 7:

The Lion Game (Analog August and September 1971). Telzey doesn’t entirely trust the Psychological Service, but occasionally teams up with them for mutual benefit. The Service has detected that there’s a new psi awareness of Telzey’s abilities at her college, and makes arrangements for her to Tinokti as an agent—and as bait! That sets her up for a nerve-wracking chase between connecting portals on the planet, where everyone can be an enemy. Reprinted in The Lion Game.

Poltergeist

Analog July 1971

Excerpt from Joe Wehrle, Jr.’s article on “The Telzey Amberdon Stories of James H. Schmitz” in The Digest Enthusiast No. 7:

Poltergeist (Analog July 1971). This is a very short piece in which Telzey, off on a weekend by herself, encounters a distraught man threatened by his own unrealized alternate personality, and has to find a way to deal with it, in order to save him and herself. Reprinted in Telzey Amberdon (Baen, 2000).

Glory Day

Analog June 1971

Excerpt from Joe Wehrle, Jr.’s article on “The Telzey Amberdon Stories of James H. Schmitz” in The Digest Enthusiast No. 7:

Glory Day (Analog June 1971). Telzey and Trigger are stunned, kid- napped, and wind up on Askanam, a day before the annual Glory Day tournaments in a political scheme that involves other telepaths. Telzey’s psionic abilities are more highly developed than the others’ and she helps Trigger develop a mind- shield. Still, they have a tough time working their way out of a danger- ous situation. Reprinted in T’nT: Telzey and Trigger (Baen, 2000).

Analog May/June 2019

Analog May/June 2019

Analog Science Fiction and Fact (Astounding) Vol. 134 No. 5 & 6 May/June 2019
Contents
Stanley Schmidt’s Editorial: John and Me: An Alternate View of the Late John Campbell
Harry Turtledove “Bonehunters”
John J. Vester’s Science Fact: The Venus Sweet Spot: Floating Home
Stanley Schmidt “The Methuselah Generation” art by Kurt Huggins
Liam Hogan “Galena”
In Times to Come (July/Aug. Preview)
Frank Smith “Cactus Season”
Wendy Nikel “12:20 Bus from the Basics”
Bruce McAllister “A Former Planetary Ruler Speaks”
John G. Cramer’s The Alternate View: Opus 200: How Big is the Proton?
Joe M. McDermott “Full Metal Mother”
Biolog: Joe M. McDermott by Richard L. Lovett
Mary E. Lowd “The Three Laws of Social Robotics”
Bud Sparhawk “Mulligan”
J.T. Sharrah “Forgetfulness”
Edward M. Lerner “The Gates of Paradise”
Dave Creek “The Dominant Heart Begins to Race” art by Josh Meehan
Phoebe Barton “Midway on the Waves”
Eric Cline “Paradigm Shift”
Cynthia Ward “On Stony Ground” art by Tomislav Tikulin
Mary Soon Lee “How to Time Travel” (verse)
Alex Shvartsman “Repairs at the Beijing West Space Elevator”
David Ebenbach “Welcome to Your Machines”
Marissa Lingen “Painting the Massive Planet”
Guy Stewrt’s Probability Zone: Robotic Space Killers; Autonomous. Broke.
Josh Pearce “Leave Your Iron at the Door”
Bruce Boston “At the Natural History Museum” (verse)
Alec Nevala-Lee “At the Fall” art by Eldar Zakirov
Don Sakers: The Reference Library
Brass Tacks (Letters)
Classified Marketplace
Anthony Lewis: Upcoming Events

Publisher: Peter Kanter
Editor: Trevor Quachri
Associate Editor: Emily Hockaday
Editorial Assistant: Deanna McLafferty
Senior Art Director: Victoria Green
Cover: Tomislav Tikulin
208 pages, $7.99 on newsstands until June 18, 2018
Analog website

SF Value Pack-8 $7.95
SF Double Issue Value Pack-12 $15.95
SF Value Pack-16 $12.95

Company Planet

Analog May 1971

Excerpt from Joe Wehrle, Jr.’s article on “The Telzey Amberdon Stories of James H. Schmitz” in The Digest Enthusiast No. 7:

Company Planet (Analog, May 1971). Telzey travels to Fermilaur, where a friend is undergoing “body remodeling,” which doesn’t sound like a good idea to Telzey. While on the planet, she uncovers a conspiracy, and her life is in danger when the powers that be suspect she is a telepath. She enters the mind of a telepathic pet animal and plants distracting thoughts to keep it from alerting its owner about her abilities. Reprinted in The Telzey Toy.

The Telzey Toy

Analog January 1971

Excerpt from Joe Wehrle, Jr.’s article on “The Telzey Amberdon Stories of James H. Schmitz” in The Digest Enthusiast No. 7:

The Telzey Toy (Analog January 1971). A producer of biological the- ater puppets that supposedly have no self-awareness kidnaps Telzey and makes a self-aware duplicate of her who agrees to be called Gaziel. Telzey’s psi abilities have been repressed until the man, Ti, can learn how to control them and her for his own purposes. Telzey needs to free herself as well as Gaziel, who will gradually be able to develop her own distinct personality when free to do so.