Read FSF, March-April 2010 Online

Authors: Spilogale Authors

FSF, March-April 2010 (39 page)

* * * *

Written a Book?

* * * *

Publish, Promote & Sell Your Book. Get Your Free Publishing Guide Now!

www.AuthorHouse.com

* * * *

F&SF classifieds work because the cost is low: only $2.00 per word (minimum of 10 words). 10% discount for 6 consecutive insertions, 15% for 12. You'll reach 100,000 high-income, highly educated readers each of whom spends hundreds of dollars a year on books, magazines, games, collectibles, audio and video tapes. Send copy and remittance to: F&SF Market Place, PO Box 3447, Hoboken, NJ 07030.

[Back to Table of Contents]

Department:
CURIOSITIES: BEWARE THE CAT,
by William Baldwin (1533)

This story of intelligent cats is still fun to read today. It is almost science fiction—if you will admit alchemy as a science. What if alchemy allowed someone to understand the language of cats?

The cats have their own society, history, and motives, which resemble what many an unsentimental cat person has imagined as the secret life of their own cat. The alchemy is treated seriously. Instructions for understanding the language of cats are given in detail. “I tarried till ten o'clock before dinner, what time Mercury began his lucky reign. And then I took a piece of the cat's liver and a piece of the kidney, a piece of the milt and the whole heart, the fox's heart and the lights, the hare's brain, the kite's maw, and the urchin's kidneys. All these I beat in a mortar together until it were small, and then made a cake of it."

The body of the story consists of several reports of conversations of cats overheard. Some of the stories have a strong anti-Papist theme.

A 1995 edition edited by William A. Ringler, Jr. and Michael Flachmann has an introduction giving reasons for considering
Beware the Cat
to be the first novel in English, and an appendix lists all of the candidates for “first English novel.” At slightly more than fifty pages, we would today consider
Beware the Cat
a very short novel at best, but it is longer than most of the other candidates, and more original.

—Rick Norwood

[Back to Table of Contents]

Department:
COMING ATTRACTIONS

Coming soon to an issue of
F&SF
near you, we'll have:

* “The Crocodiles” by Steven Popkes, a moving story of life during wartime

* “Why that Crazy Old Lady Goes up the Mountain” by Michael Libling, a mindbending story with everything: adventure, romance, and philosophical questions. But no zombies. A mindbending story with everything except zombies.

* “Doctor Death vs. the Vampire” by Aaron Schutz. With a title like that, do you really need to know more?

We've also got new stories coming soon from Alex Irvine, Robert Onopa, Rachel Pollack, Kate Wilhelm, and a satire that was discovered in the papers of the late John Sladek. Subscribe now so you won't miss any of the next issues.

Visit www.fsfmag.com for information on additional titles by this and other authors.

Other books

Mated by Zoe Winters
The Silk Factory by Judith Allnatt
Ser Cristiano by Hans Küng
Renegade Millionaire by Kristi Gold
Suspended Sentences by Brian Garfield
Born at Dawn by Nigeria Lockley
Tessa Ever After by Brighton Walsh
Portraits of a Marriage by Sándor Márai