The Complete Short Stories: Volume 2. Adam Thirlwell

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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#litres_trial_promo">The Air Disaster

       Low-Flying Aircraft

       The Life and Death of God

       Notes Towards a Mental Breakdown

       The 60 Minute Zoom

       The Smile

       The Dead Time

       The Index

       The Intensive Care Unit

       Theatre of War

       Having a Wonderful Time

       One Afternoon at Utah Beach

       Zodiac 2000

       Motel Architecture

       A Host of Furious Fancies

       News from the Sun

       Memories of the Space Age

       Myths of the Near Future

       Report on an Unidentified Space Station

       The Object of the Attack

       Answers to a Questionnaire

       The Man Who Walked on the Moon

       The Secret History of World War 3

       Love in a Colder Climate

       The Enormous Space

       The Largest Theme Park in the World

       War Fever

       Dream Cargoes

       A Guide to Virtual Death

       The Message from Mars

       Report from an Obscure Planet

       Interview with J. G. Ballard

       About the Author

       By the Same Author

       About the Publisher

      Short stories are the loose change in the treasury of fiction, easily ignored beside the wealth of novels available, an over-valued currency that often turns out to be counterfeit. At its best, in Borges, Ray Bradbury and Edgar Allan Poe, the short story is coined from precious metal, a glint of gold that will glow for ever in the deep purse of your imagination.

      Short stories have always been important to me. I like their snapshot quality, their ability to focus intensely on a single subject. They’re also a useful way of trying out the ideas later developed at novel length. Almost all my novels were first hinted at in short stories, and readers of The Crystal World, Crash and Empire of the Sun will find their seeds germinating somewhere in this collection.

      When I started writing, fifty years ago, short stories were immensely popular with readers, and some newspapers printed a new short story every day. Sadly, I think that people at present have lost the knack of reading short stories, a response perhaps to the baggy and long-winded narratives of television serials. Young writers, myself included, have always seen their first novels as a kind of virility test, but so many novels published today would have been better if they had been recast as short stories. Curiously, there are many perfect short stories, but no perfect novels.

      The short story still survives, especially in science fiction, which makes the most of its closeness to the folk tale and the parable. Many of the stories in this collection were first published in science fiction magazines, though readers at the time loudly complained that they weren’t science fiction at all.

      But I was interested in the real future that I could see approaching, and less in the invented future that science fiction preferred. The future, needless to say, is a dangerous area to enter, heavily mined and with a tendency to turn and bite your ankles as you stride forward. A correspondent recently pointed out to me that the poetry-writing computers in Vermilion Sands are powered by valves. And why don’t all those sleek people living in the future have PCs and pagers?

      I could only reply that Vermilion Sands isn’t set in the future at all, but in a kind of visionary present – a description that fits the stories in this book and almost everything else I have written. But oh for a steam-powered computer and a wind-driven television set. Now, there’s an idea for a short story …

      J.G. Ballard, 2001

      1

      There is no single way of talking about the collected stories of J. G. Ballard. They are so various that no one reading will contain them. When talking about this giant oeuvre, it’s better to borrow terms from geology, and other sciences of natural phenomena; better to talk of strata, or of eras.

      And a preliminary summary of these epochs in one paragraph

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