p 12 • The Bear Who Saved the World • (1977) • short story by L. Sprague de Camp and Catherine Crook de Camp p 26 • Old Man Henderson • (1951) • short story by Kris Neville p 40 • The Million Dollar Pup • (1977) • short story by Catherine Crook de Camp p 62 • The Smallest Dragonboy • [Dragonriders of Pern] • (1973) • short story by Anne McCaffrey p 82 • The Large Ant • (1960) • short story by Howard Fast p 96 • Dead Man's Chest • [W. Wilson Newbury] • (1977) • short story by L. Sprague de Camp p 112 • Socrates • (1951) • short story by John Christopher p 132 • The Horse Show • (1977) • short story by Catherine Crook de Camp p 151 • Other Worlds, Other Times-Books You Will Enjoy • (1977) • essay
Catherine Crook de Camp, (November 6, 1907, New York City – April 9, 2000, Plano, Texas) was an American science fiction and fantasy author and editor. Most of her work was done in collaboration with her husband L. Sprague de Camp, to whom she was married for sixty years. Her solo work was largely non-fiction.
Catherine Crook was born Catherine Adelaide Crook. She majored in English and Economics at Barnard College, New York, from which she graduated magna cum laude. After college she was a teacher. She was introduced to her future husband L. Sprague de Camp by her sister Dorothy, and married him in 1940. They had two sons, Lyman Sprague de Camp and Gerard Beekman de Camp.
The de Camps lived for many years in Villanova, Pennsylvania, and moved to Plano, Texas in 1989.
They collaborated on numerous works of fiction and non-fiction beginning in the 1960s, with Catherine revising Sprague's drafts. Catherine's contributions were not always credited. She also wrote The Money Tree, Teach Your Child to Manage Money, and Creatures of the Cosmos on her own.
She was a member of Science Fiction Writers of America, the Authors Guild, and First Fandom. Over the years she attended many science fiction conventions and traveled widely all over the world with her husband. In her final years she suffered from Alzheimer's Disease.
Robert A. Heinlein in part dedicated his 1982 novel Friday to Catherine. Catherine died on April 9, 2000, aged 92. Sprague de Camp survived her by six months. Their ashes share a columbarioum niche together in Arlington National Cemetery.
This is one of those books I never would have owned if it had not been set out at the high school where I taught, left for the taking as a discard. It lived briefly in my classroom library then came home with me forever--
--where it sat for a long time until recently when I opened it on a whim.
What I forget about many such collections is that they are pretty fun to read, and that they're designed to be the right length to read at a single sitting. That's what I found here. The stories are aimed sort of at young people, and there is nothing technical or sophisticated about any of these stories, but that doesn't mean they're not interesting or have no impact. On the contrary.
"The Bear Who Saved the World" is an uplift story told from the bear's point of view. "Old Man Henderson" gives us a near future where the kind, elderly hero of moon landings is treated as a bore by younger generations who have grown up accustomed to the wonder of space travel. "The Million Dollar Pup" is the story of a handy young girl and an elderly mentor inventing a robotic pet where dogs and cats are outlawed. "The Smallest Dragonboy," the most fantasy-like of the collection, is the story of a bullied underdog coming up big. "The Large Ant" is a first-contact story where we find that humanity's first instinct is violence. "Dead Man's Chest" tells about following a treasure map to a Lovecraftian horror. "Socrates" is the melancholy story of a sweet dog born with human intelligence. And "The Horse Show" tells about a nerdy boy learning confidence from the horse-like creature he brings back from a distant planet.
TL;DR--All of the stories center on an animal or pet or creature, though the character of the creatures and the tone and vibe of every story was quite different.
These stories are all simple, in a way. Quick reads. Limited characters. But they all have surprising depth, leaving the reader to ponder the nature of other intelligences--bears, alien ants, alien horses--and whether they might not be kinder and more generous than we are. They cause one to consider the significance of pets and why we want to lavish our love on them, as well as wonder whether those animals, on the whole, are better or worse off for that attention. They make one think about how small man is compared to the universe. And so on.
On another level, this collection makes me think about all the stories written over the years, the ones showing up in magazines and Hugo-winners collections, where they are read by a few people and then forgotten. Most of the stories are from the 50's and 60's, and one comes from 1938, so that even when the collection was published in 1977, they were being brought back from oblivion. It's nobody's job to keep them alive, I suppose, but it still makes me kinda sad to imagine them languishing in silence on increasingly obscure bookshelves...
I won't try to make the case that there's anything essential here, and this exact book is probably of limited interest to most readers. It's a little dated, obviously. (The words "rocket ship" are used unironically by the authors. It's like that.) This is just one collection, like a hundred or thousand others, which have been mostly forgotten. Any of them might be more worthy of opening up if you happen on it, but are not really worth hunting down. However, I wouldn't mind someone else reading these 60-, 70-, 80-year-old stories and comparing their thoughts with mine.
I absolutely loved this book as a child. "The Million Dollar Pup," "The Smallest Dragonboy," "Socrates," and "The Horse Show" were my favorites.
Here is the table of contents, courtesy of Powell's Books (the ONLY place I could find the stories listed online!):
Table of Contents De Camp, L. S. and De Camp, C. C. The bear who saved the world. Neville, K. Old Man Henderson. De Camp, C. C. The million dollar pup. McCaffrey, A. The smallest dragonboy. Fast, H. The large ant. De Camp, L. S. Dead man's chest. Christopher, J. Socrates. De Camp, C. C. The horse show.