
Henry Kuttner not only had a good imagination, he had a great sense of humor too. There were some interesting stories in this book. I'm also glad that my son was able to experience it. I'm glad I had the opportunity to learn about this author and read some of his stuff.
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I read it and found it a bit dated but the first tale that the movie had been based was a fun read. I hadn't known that it was really a collection of stories but he liked them all.

I saw the movie 'The Last Mimzy' with my children and we all liked it so wanted to take that a little further I bought the book for my son because he loves to read such books. I've always loved science fiction but my real preference has truly been Speculative Fiction. Incidentally, I didn't know about the "Mimzy" movie, until I got hold of this book. Still, for what they are, these are great stories and well worth another look.

His characters are often one-dimensional loners, who have tenuous connections with others. Kuttner is a writer of ideas more than character. Some of the stories, as I mentioned, are a bit dated, some are awkward reading, some are written in dialect which makes them a bit hard to follow. There are odd families, too, like the reclusive Hogbens with their supernatural abilities. Genetics is a hot topic, but not as hot as in 2008.

Oddly enough, there are no desktop computers or cellphones in this fantastic new world. Homo sapiens is evolving rapidly toward Homo superior, which makes for some difficult parent-child relations. Of course, the classic Sci Fi tropes are all there. In some cases, technology has outpaced the author's imagination. They are fanciful stories of colliding realities, and human dilemmas. I still remember some of the stories from that golden time. What if a box of toys from far in the future fell into a twentieth century schoolyard, and some kid took them home to play with? What if a factory worker from another civilization fell into a twentieth century factory and made what only looked like a commonplace entertainment center? What if you stepped into an upscale shop that advertised, "We Have What You Need"? (And, found out, they really did?) These and many more intriguing conundrums are explored in a wonderful collection of seventeen short stories.Īuthor Henry Kuttner flourished in the golden age of science fiction, which was also, coincidentally, this reviewer's youth. I've never read a book that wasn't 300 percent better than the movie.

This definitive collection will be a revelation to those who wish to discover or rediscover Henry Kuttner, a true master of the universe. At the time of his death at forty-two in 1958, he had created as many as 170 stories under more than a dozen pseudonyms?sometimes writing entire issues of science fiction magazines?in close collaboration with his wife, C. Kuttner was a writer?s writer whose visionary works anticipated our own computer-controlled, machine-made world. Ray Bradbury called Henry Kuttner ?a man who shaped science fiction and fantasy in its most important years.? Marion Zimmer Bradley and Roger Zelazny said he was a major inspiration. For the items are changing the way the children think and perceive the world around them?for better or worse. When he and his sister begin to play with these trinkets?including a crystal cube that magnifies the unimaginable and a strange doll with removable organs that don?t quite correspond to those of the human body?their parents grow concerned. In ?Mimsy Were the Borogoves?the inspiration for New Line Cinema?s major motion picture The Last Mimzy?a boy finds a discarded box containing a treasure trove of curious objects. These seventeen classic stories create their own unique galaxy of vain, protective, and murderous robots devilish angels and warm and angry aliens. THE LAST MIMZY IS THE IDEAL INTRODUCTION TO AN AUTHOR WHO WAS AHEAD OF HIS TIME?AND WHOSE TIME HAS FINALLY COME.
