"Going to the Beach" (1973)
"Going to the Beach" debuted in a 1973 anthology of all-new stories edited by Roger Elwood, Showcase, and apparently languished in obscurity until 2023.
This is a good surprise ending story about the automated future in which most jobs are done by machines or androids, who it seems are mechanical robots, not artificial but organic and live humans, as they are in some stories. Our main character is stuck doing a job that hasn't been automated yet, and he is pretty bitter and unhappy about it--while out and about he sees some people whose jobs are automated and who thus have leisure time; these lucky bastards are riding the train to the beach, and he envies them. (A flashback suggests that what job you get is based on how well you do on tests in your youth--this is another of those socialistic futures, I guess, in which the government manages e every jot and tittle of the economy.) An android prostitute tries to pick up our guy--he tells her he has no money but she persists and manages to badger him into letting her into his apartment. She only really wanted to plug into his wall socket for two or three hours to recharge, anyway. Another android, an engineer, comes by the apartment. This engineer has brought our guy something to work on, and the two argue a little over when he will be done with it and the engineer will come back for it. What exactly it is, I had a little trouble figuring out. The main character turns out to be a writer (this very story we are reading, "Going to the Beach," is the story he begins typing away as the story ends) so at first I thought maybe the engineer had brought him a new typewriter, but now I think the engineer brought him a bundle of paper, of documents, something a computer had written, and the human has to copyedit it. The writer is participating in the process of automating his own job, of putting himself out of work. The engineer obliquely points out the irony of the situation, reminding the writer that in the past luddites attacked the machines they feared were going to replace them.
Perhaps mirroring how workers in this world came to embrace being put out of work, it seems like the main character is warming up to the android sex worker, and may end up starting a relationship with her, even though such a relationship is bound to be ersatz and sterile--she doesn't have real human feelings and cannot bear him children.
In addition to the idea revealed by the surprise ending, that the creative work of a writer cannot be duplicated by a machine (but we are heading there), a theme which feels like something ripped from today's headlines, "Going to the Beach" addresses issues of class, sex, and whether or not robots might have real feelings and deserve some or all of the rights actual humans enjoy. But the oddest, most original, thing about "Going to the Beach" is the attitude about work of the writer and his society. It is pretty common, in SF stories that feature societies in which robots do all the work, for the author to suggest that a lack of work has a terrible effect on people; they get depressed or turn to crime or addictions and stop having children and so on, because work--struggle, problem solving, pursuing goals and overcoming obstacles--is what gives life meaning. And Wolfe maybe means his story to convey the same message, but nobody in the story voices that message directly--just the opposite! In "Going to the Beach," the guy with a job feels that he can't have a real life, can't have a family, because he has to work, while those on the dole have families and are happily living it up. While it has been typical throughout history for being on public assistance to bear a stigma, this society's culture and establishment actively frown on work and workers--people who did well on the test and have no work get "Honorable Income," a government handout that is "crisp, clean currency," while those who work get "work money, greasy and dirty." The writer is even surprised the android whore wants to be with him, as a man who has to work for money is thus of very low status--why doesn't she join the beachgoers and try to pick up one of them? It is hinted that she feels some class solidarity that reaches across the lone between living worker and robot worker.
Like so many Wolfe stories, this one has a plot that is something of a puzzle and is dense with thought-provoking material besides. "Going to the Beach" is the most ambitious and complex of the stories we are reading today.
"The Green Wall Said" (1967)
"The Green Wall Said" first saw print in Michael Moorcock's New Worlds, in an issue with an installment of the serialized version of Thomas Disch's Camp Concentration. This two-page story was reprinted in the 92-page 1992 collection Young Wolfe.Five people who speak English have been captured by aliens and are aboard their space ship. The five captives introduce themselves to each other and speculate on why they have been seized; as they do so the changing text on the wall of their cell indicates the aliens hope to learn from these humans how to devote themselves to the community, to sacrifice themselves for others, something the aliens, apparently, think humans customarily do but which the aliens, I guess, do not do. The group does include a nun, a doctor, a soldier who serves on the crew of a rescue helicopter, and an accountant, people we might see as devoted to helping others. At the end of the story it seems that maybe the space ship is going to crash or otherwise malfunction.
Among themselves the five humans talk a lot about their ethnic and national origin and their religion, so I am not sure if Wolfe is being ironic in this story, suggesting the aliens are mistaken and Earth people in fact do not sacrifice themselves for others or the community but instead are obsessed with tribal rivalries, or if he is pointing out that Earth people often work together despite differences. The fact that the alien text has no punctuation and somewhat crude syntax further adds to the confusion. Also strange is the fact that, while the humans all chatter among themselves, they don't directly respond to the text on the wall.
This story is kind of gimmicky and lacks the sort of emotional moments and character-developing moments, the world-building elements and moments of conflict and tension, that we see in today's other two stories, and is the least of them.
"Mountains Like Mice" (1966)
Here we have a pretty good adventure story about a guy living in a strange milieu. Dirk is a student at the fortress-like academy near a desert; he is undergoing rigorous training that will, it seems, afford him the psychic ability to control animals as well provide him great skill at tracking people and beasts, finding water in the arid wilderness, assessing botanical specimens and the composition of soil and the like. To graduate from his training, Dirk, like all those before him, has to survive some two months alone in the wilderness and evade capture by the freshman of the academy who will be hunting him. Those who are returned alive before the two months are up are relegated to the servant or slave class.We follow Dirk's adventure in the wilderness, which takes an unexpected turn when he has to rescue one of his superiors, who has been captured by the half-sized people who are his people's enemies. As the story proceeds, we learn more about the survival test, and about the history of Dirk's people and the planet they live on--Dirk and his fellows are the descendants of Earth scientists who were trapped on Mars when Earth abandoned them! The short people are not native Martians, but descendants of humans genetically engineered to live on Mars permanently. Similarly, odd Martian animals, like the six-foot-long cobra the shorties use as a guard dog, are the product of genetic engineering. Dirk's superior uses his knowledge of ancient history and science to direct Dirk in how to liberate him.
The dangerous test (like in Tunnel in the Sky) and the fact that Dirk has been kept in the dark about the reality of his world, the true nature of which he discovers over the course of the story (like in "Orphans of the Sky") and the mentor figures are reminding me of the earlier work of Robert Heinlein.
This is the easiest to understand and the most traditional of today's stories and perhaps the most entertaining. "Mountains Like Mice," after its debut in If, reappeared in Young Wolfe.
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In Wolfe's large body of generally excellent work these stories are relatively minor, but "Going to the Beach" and "Mountains Like Mice" are full of material--a mystery plot, human relationships, and multiple SF themes--to enjoy and to grapple with and I have no hesitation about recommending them. "The Green Wall Said" is a merely acceptable vignette.
More 1960s magazine SF awaits us in the next episode of MPorcius Fiction Log.