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Voor andere auteurs genaamd Bill Adler, zie de verduidelijkingspagina.

Bill Adler (2) via een alias veranderd in Bill Adler, Jr..

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Toon 8 van 8
Easy to read. Nice guide for advise. It gives some stories of how things go wrong. The dangers of escalation. Than gives practical advice on what to do.
 
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nx74defiant | Aug 30, 2023 |
The stories may be dated now, but I was looking for something to listen to during my morning walk. This previously unread time travel anthology in my library served that need. Authors, many of whom are dead, wrote these short stories at the start of their careers. I think the thing that's different about old Sci-Fi is that authors didn't spend pages of text explicitly talking about pseudo-science in those days. What you read was pure fiction that left you wondering about the possibilities.
 
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ronploude | 4 andere besprekingen | Oct 16, 2021 |
This was a fun little book with quick little chapters containing techniques that children use to get what they want.

- Children use these strategies without having been taught them.
- Adults abandon them because of what they have been taught.

It reminded me that there are lots of strategies out there.


Contents
...
Introduction
Throw A Tantrum
Try A Wild And Scary Threat
Just Cry
Pretend You Don't Hear Or Understand What The Other Side Is Saying
Pretend You Don't Understand To Get The Other Side To Offer Something They Didn't Plan On Conceding
Share Something Important With The Other Side
Call In Backup (Or "My Dad Can Bet Up Your Dad")
Don't Think About Negotiating - Just Do It
Be Nice
Be Disarmingly Honest
Be Yourself
Know Your Own Team
Play Your Best Game
Be Direct About Your Needs
Take You Ball And Go Home
Stick With Your Gang
Give Yourself A Time-Out
Let The Other Guy Think He's Won
Break The Rules
Change The Rules
Follow The Rules To The Letter
Be Naive
Go Out Of Your Way To Please The Other Side
Be Needy
Ask The Person Who's Most Likely To Say "Yes"
Play One Side Against The Other
Delay Matters (Or "I Have To Ask My Mommy")
Move Slowly And Procrastinate
Do A Bad Job
Make A Deal That You Can Exchange For A Better Deal Later
Win Through Sympathy
Act Forlorn
Change The Subject
Give Your Business "Lemonade Stand" Appeal
Solicit A Bribe
Keep Coming Back To The Same Question
Play The Repeat Game
Be Irrational
Worry The Other Side That You Might Be Sick
Make Weak Promises
Win Through Cuteness
Don't Fear Failure
Be Prepared - But Not Overprepared
You've Won - Now You Have To Win Your Friends Back
You've Lost - Now Don't Be A Sorehead
Optimism Rules
Back To The Beginning

 
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bread2u | Jul 1, 2020 |

Time Machines is made up of twenty-two really diverse short science fiction stories all centered on time travel or time machines.

  • A Shape in Time by Anthony Boucher - Agent L-3H is hired to prevent marriages until she fails to seduce her man. This story has one of my favorite quotes, "Temporal Agent L-3H is always delectable in any shape; that's why the bureau employs her on marriage-prevention assignments" (p 1).
  • Who's Cribbin' by Jack Lewis - someone from the past is stealing a young sci-fi writer's work. Who is the plagiarist?
  • The Business, As Usual by Mack Reynolds - a 20th century souvenir hunter visits the 30th century.
  • The Third Level by Jack Finney - Somewhere in the bowels of Grand Central Station there is another level which will take you to 1894 New York.
  • A Touch of Petulance by Ray Bradbury - what happens when you meet your future self and he tells you you will murder your wife.
  • The History of Temporal Express by Wayne Freeze - what if you could go back in time to meet a deadline you previously missed?
  • Star, Bright by Mark Clifton - a widower's child, abnormally bright, learns how to transport herself through time but her father isn't as smart. Interestingly enough, someone drew a Mobius slip in the book possibly to illustrate the phenomenon of a one-sided plane.
  • The Last Two Days of Larry Joseph's Life - In This Time, Anyway by Bill Adler, Jr. - Two roommates watch as their third roommate quietly disappears.
  • Three Sundays in a Week by Edgar Allan Poe - Two lovers get around the stipulation they can only marry when there are three Sundays in the same week.
  • Bad Timing by Molly Brown - an archivist in the 24th century falls in love with a woman from the 20th century but he's a bumbling idiot when it comes to time travel. As an aside, this story reminded me of the movie, "Lake House."
  • Night by John W. Campbell - a pilot testing out an anti-gravity coil has an accident and he needs the help of aliens to get home.
  • Time Travelers Never Die by Jack McDevitt - a crazy story about a man who has two deaths.
  • Rotating Cylinders and the Possibility of Global Causality Violation by Larry Niven - what if time travel doesn't work?
  • What Goes Around by Derryl Murphy - a ghost from the future comes to help a washed up actor.
  • You See, But You Do Not Observe by Robert Sawyer - Sherlock Holmes visits the future to find alien life.
  • Ripples in the Dirac Sea by Geoffrey A. Landis - a man tries to flee his own destiny by using a time machine but keeps returning to the same moment when he is to die.
  • The Odyssey of Flight 33 by Rod Serling - an airplane en route to New York curiously picks up speed and somehow lands 200 million years ahead of schedule.
  • Fire Watch by Connie Willis - not read (on Challenge list elsewhere)
  • What If by Isaac Asimov - not read
  • There and Then by Steven Utley - not read
  • Wireless by Rudyard Kipling - not read
  • The Last Article by Larry Turtledove - not read

 
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SeriousGrace | 4 andere besprekingen | Jan 3, 2019 |
The Literary Agent's Guide to Getting Published is succinct, to the point, and pragmatic. Mr. Adler has substantial experience from the publishing side of things and gives us insight into what goes on inside an editor or agents head when a proposal crosses their desk. This book spells out the step-by-step process of coming up with a marketable book proposal, memorializing that proposal into a document agents and editors can use to justify publishing your book (including what kinds of market-data they need), and then gives the viewpoints of a respectable number of editors and agents about what they want to see to keep your proposal out of the slush-pile. The book then finishes with sample book proposals on a number of topics.

This information could potentially be very dry. However, Mr. Adler's experience on the other side of the fence, as an author who writes books about solving problems, peppers this book with just enough humor to keep it interesting without devolving into self-aggrandizement. He does, of course, promote his own books in this book. What sane author WOULDN'T? But the example he most often uses, a book about outwitting squirrels, is so humorous it adds a personal 'I've been where you are now' element to his writing that adds credibility to his advice
 
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Anna_Erishkigal | Mar 30, 2013 |
A great anthology of one of my favorite genres of science fiction. Each story includes a brief introduction by Bill Adler, Jr. , the editor of the anthology. The following stories are included:

A Shape in Time: Anthony Boucher
Who's Cribbing? Jack Lewis
The Business, As Usual: Mack Reynolds
The Third Level: Jack Finney
A Touch of Petulance: Ray Bradbury
The History of Temporal Express: Wayne Freeze
Star, Bright: Mark Clifton
The Last Two Days of Larry Joseph's Life-In this time anyway: Bill Adler, Jr.
Three Sundays in a Week: Edgar allan Poe
Bad Timing: Molly Brown
Night: John W. Campbell, Jr.
Time Travelers Never Die: Jack McDevitt
Rotating Cylinders and the Possibility of Global Causality Violation: Larry Niven
What Goes Around: Derryl Murphy
You See, But You Do Not Observe: Robert Sawyer
Ripples in the Dirac Sea: Geoffrey A. Landis
The Odyssey of Flight 33: Rod Serling
Fire Watch: Connie Willis
What if: Isaac Asimov
There and Then: Steven Utley
Wireless: Rudyard Kipling
The Last Article: Harry Turtledove
 
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barbharris1 | 4 andere besprekingen | Mar 18, 2013 |
These stories are not necessarily the ones you'd see up for the Hugo Awards -- this isn't really a "best of" kind of anthology. However, this is exactly the reason why I enjoyed this book so much. I've already read the "best of" stories, and I was looking for something new. This book did a wonderful job of combining some of my favorite short stories in the genre with other excellent stories I'd never even heard of before. I originally purchased the book solely to get my hands on a copy of the story "Star, Bright" by Mark Clifton (one of my favorites since childhood), but thoroughly enjoyed the rest of the book as well.

As an aside, I've also found these stories to be well read and enjoyed by the junior and senior high students I teach. Short stories are a great way to introduce them to the genre of science fiction!½
 
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miki | 4 andere besprekingen | Jul 11, 2007 |
Some really outstanding stories. Most enjoyable collection of time travel stories I've ever read.
 
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ElnEm | 4 andere besprekingen | Sep 17, 2006 |
Toon 8 van 8