Alone Against Tomorrow

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Alone Against Tomorrow
Author Harlan Ellison
Cover artist Brad Johannsen
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) short stories
Publisher Macmillan Publishers
Publication date 1971
Media type Print (Hardcover)
Pages 277 pp

Alone Against Tomorrow is a collection of short stories by author Harlan Ellison. Published in the United States in 1971, as a ten year retrospective of Ellison's short stories, it includes some of his most famous work. It was later published in the UK in two volumes as All the Sounds of Fear in 1973 and The Time of the Eye in 1974. All of the stories in this collection center around isolation and alienation, and were selected from previous short story collections to fit this theme.

The book was dedicated to, among others, four student protesters who were killed in the Kent State shootings of 1970. This dedication prompted a response from a reader calling the students "hooligans" who were "Communist-led radical revolutionaries and anarchists, and deserved to be shot". [1] This letter was reprinted in the introduction to Ellison's subsequent 1974 short story collection Approaching Oblivion. Ellison states that this letter frightened him and was one of the things that led him to change that collection from a call to action to a cry of frustration disillusionment.

[edit] Contents

  • I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream
  • The Discarded
  • Deeper Than the Darkness
  • Blind Lightning
  • All the Sounds of Fear
  • The Silver Corridor
  • "Repent, Harlequin!" Said the Ticktockman
  • Bright Eyes
  • Are You Listening?
  • Try a Dull Knife
  • In Lonely Lands
  • Eyes of Dust
  • Nothing for My Noon Meal
  • O Ye of Little Faith
  • The Time of the Eye
  • Life Hutch
  • The Very Last Day of a Good Woman
  • Night Vigil
  • Lonelyache
  • Pennies, Off a Dead Man's Eyes

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Ellison, Harlan, Approaching Oblivion, Walker and Company New York, 1974. p 13 A photocopy of the letter is included in the introduction.