Giant Killer (story)

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"Giant Killer"
by A. Bertram Chandler
AstoundingSFOct45.jpg
Cover Astounding Science Fiction October 1945
Country Australia
Language English
Genre(s) Science fiction
Published in Astounding Science Fiction
Publication type Periodical
Publisher Street & Smith
Media typePrint
Publication dateOctober 1945

"Giant Killer" is a science fiction short story by A. Bertram Chandler. It was first published in the October 1945 issue of Astounding Science Fiction , and later included in many science fiction anthologies, including World of Wonder edited by Fletcher Pratt. [1] In 1996 it was shortlisted for a Retro Hugo Award for Best Novella. [2]

Contents

Plot summary

Called a "pocket universe" story by The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, [3] "Giant Killer" is told from the point-of-view of a colony of mutants living in a spaceship. Though they are eventually (in the final sentence) revealed to be rats, they are obviously sentient lifeforms: they have a culture, complete with marriage, seers, governmental structures, specialized safety equipment, and ritualized combat. They are illiterate, albeit: they marvel as the giants make black marks on "skin," which they perceive as some inscrutable form of "sorcery." The "giants" of the story's title are the humans crewing the spaceship. Much is made of the mutants' efforts to understand the giants' fascinating world, including such locales as the Place-of-Life-Which-Is-Not-Life, obviously the robotics laboratory.

Further publications

In the 1967 novel "Contraband from Otherspace", Chandler's character John Grimes travels to an alternate history timeline where mutant rats have taken over the Rim Worlds and cruelly enslaved their human population. In that context, the mutant rats are obviously the book's villains who must be fought. Finding that the mutant rats developed on a spaceship which crashed on one of the Rim words, and that the mutants survived the crash to multiply, conquer and enslave the humans, Grimes manages to take his ship back in time and blow up the rat-infested ship, thus aborting the entire timeline of mutant rat conquest. Grimes is uneasily aware that his act might be considered as genocide, but sees no other way to avert the enslavement of the humans.

See also

Related Research Articles

Arthur Bertram Chandler was an Anglo-Australian merchant marine officer, sailing the world in everything from tramp steamers to troop ships, but who later turned his hand to a second career as a prolific author of pulp science fiction. He also wrote under the pseudonyms of George Whitley, Andrew Dunstan and S.H.M. Many of his short stories draw on his extensive sailing background. In 1956, he emigrated to Australia and became an Australian citizen. By 1958 he was an officer on the Sydney-Hobart route. Chandler commanded various ships in the Australian and New Zealand merchant navies, including his service as the last master of the Australian aircraft carrier HMAS Melbourne; by law, the ship was required to have an officer on board while awaiting its towing to China to be broken up. Chandler wrote over 40 novels and 200 works of short fiction, winning the Australian Ditmar Awards for the short story "The Bitter Pill" and for three novels: False Fatherland, The Bitter Pill, and The Big Black Mark. One of Chandler's daughters, Jenny Chandler, married British horror fiction writer Ramsey Campbell. His other children were Penelope Anne Chandler and Christopher John Chandler.

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<i>Neanderthals</i> (anthology)

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References

  1. ""Giant Killer" by A. Bertram Chandler". ISFDB. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  2. "1946 Retro Hugo Awards". World Science Fiction Society. Archived from the original on 7 May 2011. Retrieved 2010-04-19.
  3. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction - Chandler, A Bertram