![]() ![]() :) Some heady SF ideas here, but most importantly. Moving on to the lighter and fun stuff, Laugh Track really set me back and made me go. I'm surprised to not like the titular story as much as all the rest, but it was still quite fun to see a planetary AI torture the last humans. ![]() I mean, sure, I read a few of these classics before, like I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream and A Boy and his Dog and I've heard of even more, but I didn't quite realize that every single story is as playful as his most well-known. So here I am, falling off the wagon and reading whole short story collections, starting with his earliest, and you know what? but why? Oh, the several reasons seemed good at the time, like I prefer novels over short stories and it's such an investment in time and Hey, isn't that the guy always surrounded by controversy and you either hate him or love him and sometimes waffle in the same day? I admit to avoiding Harlan for most of my life despite calling myself a master fan. Wondering whether to read early Harlan Ellison is a complete no-brainer. ![]()
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