Ratings6
Average rating3.7
All the Myriad Ways is a collection of 14 short stories and essays by science fiction author Larry Niven, originally published in 1971.
Contents
"All the Myriad Ways"
"Passerby"
"For a Foggy Night"
"Wait it Out"
"The Jigsaw Man"
"Not Long Before the End"
"Unfinished Story #1"
"Unfinished Story #2"
"Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex"
"Exercise in Speculation: The Theory and Practice of Teleportation"
"The Theory and Practice of Time Travel"
"Inconstant Moon" (Made into an Outer Limits episode)
"What Can You Say About Chocolate Covered Manhole Covers?"
"Becalmed in Hell"
Reviews with the most likes.
I bought the paperback in 1976, but I haven't kept track of how many times I've read each story since then. I've just now read the whole book, which I don't normally do, because as usual I like some stories more than others.“All the myriad ways”: Two stars, and that's generous. The title story is the one I like least: I neither enjoy it nor agree with it. But it's not quite bad enough for one star.“Passerby”: Three stars. An unlikely story, but not a bad one.“For a foggy night”: Four stars. Preposterous but delightful; I'm fond of this one.“Wait it out”: Two stars. Unlikely and not particularly entertaining.“The jigsaw man”: Two stars. First published in 1967, this was at the time a reasonable and interesting attempt to predict the future; but the prediction hasn't yet come true, and it's not particularly entertaining as a story.“Not long before the end”: Four stars. A fantasy story in which magic is found to be a non-renewable resource. A good idea and a nice story.“Man of steel/woman of Kleenex”: Three stars. A non-fiction but amusing discussion of Superman's unique and inevitable sexual problems.“The theory and practice of time travel”: Three stars. A quite interesting non-fiction essay.“Inconstant moon”: Four stars. A good story about a night when the moon was much brighter than usual, and what that may mean.“What can you say about chocolate covered manhole covers?”: Three stars. This is quite fun, but there isn't really much to it, beyond the central idea.“Becalmed in hell”: Two stars. This is the oldest story in the book, dating from 1965, and it shows. It reminds me of [a:Hal Clement 70180 Hal Clement https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1208188359p2/70180.jpg], although not at his best.