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The Trouble with Tycho and Cosmic Engineers Kindle Edition
Adventurers journey into the foreboding unknown regions of outer space in these two classic science fiction tales from the Hugo and Nebula Award–winning author.
The Trouble with Tycho
Prospecting on the moon is grim, dangerous, and usually unrewarding. Most greenhorns don’t know that until after they arrive, and Chris Jackson is no exception. He put everything he owns, and then some, into this venture, and he’ll be ruined if he fails. Jackson’s last chance at success is hidden in the uncharted crater Tycho—where three expeditions have already disappeared. Jackson, a beautiful immigrant, and a visiting doctor set out to find their fortunes . . . and discover whether the terrifying rumors of what lurks within Tycho are true.
Cosmic Engineers
“Upon you and you alone must rest the fate of the universe. You are the only ones to save it.” Thus spoke the mysterious Cosmic Engineers to a small group of human beings on the rim of the Solar System. Courageously journeying beyond uncharted stars, somewhere in the vastness of the galaxy, they will meet the greatest challenge of their lives—the catastrophic fury of the Hellhounds of Space.
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Product details
- ASIN : B0BGKM3LYL
- Publisher : Open Road Media Sci-Fi & Fantasy (November 29, 2022)
- Publication date : November 29, 2022
- Language : English
- File size : 3.6 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 291 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #120,117 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #490 in Alien Invasion Science Fiction
- #517 in Space Exploration Science Fiction eBooks
- #1,194 in Exploration Science Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

During his fifty-five-year career, Clifford D. Simak produced some of the most iconic science fiction stories ever written. Born in 1904 on a farm in southwestern Wisconsin, Simak got a job at a small-town newspaper in 1929 and eventually became news editor of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, writing fiction in his spare time. Simak was best known for the book City, a reaction to the horrors of World War II, and for his novel Way Station. In 1953 City was awarded the International Fantasy Award, and in following years, Simak won three Hugo Awards and a Nebula Award. In 1977 he became the third Grand Master of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, and before his death in 1988, he was named one of three inaugural winners of the Horror Writers Association's Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement.
Customer reviews
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"He was dead. There was no need to look upon his face, dried and desiccated, mummified by the aridness . . ."
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 23, 2023This is not just a space adventure. Simak has created another of his dynamic visions of far-flung human life. It is a story and a philosophy - an idea of thought that lifts my thoughts to ponder. Enjoy
- Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2023Two very different Simak stories.
The Trouble with Tyco takes place on the moon. It’s a small personal story about a pair of prospectors who take a chance on the most desolate part in the moon and what they find. He does a nice job, especially considering when it was written, of making the challenges of prospecting on the moon real. It’s amazing how similar it is to other books, I’ve read written more recently, that spell out similar realities.
As with many of his books, there are larger themes at work that he explores admirably.
The Cosmic Engineers
This story is a little hit or miss. Big ideas, vast timeframes and distances and interesting themes regarding life, time and the universe. He doesn’t shy away from anything.
The execution is a bit haphazard. Dialogue is clunky, characters are not realistic, settings are described minimally, and the plot lurches from time to time and place to place. Not his best work!
For big ideas, the stories get a 5. For the details they got an 3; overall that’s a 4. And you can’t beat the price when you get them both for the price of one!
VFL
- Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2018This close encounters story is rather dated. The hero/narrator has a good sense of humor. Recommended for third grade level for light weight, kid stuff, action/adventure appeal. Too many unanswered questions.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 22, 2014IS SIMAK!!!!!
- Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2013Chris is a twenty-seven-year-old down-home boy who is trying to hit it rich on the moon as a prospector. He's just getting by however when he stumbles upon a disabled vehicle that has been hit by a meteorite that is/was being operated by Amelia Thompson, and is baking in the lunar sun. It turns out that Amelia's on her way to the fabled, legendary, and feared Tycho crater on a desperate attempt to make it big.
The Tycho crater is considered cursed by those on the moon as it is a place where people have been known to have gone, but who then never come back. Realizing that his backers wouldn't wait forever for him to strike it big, he decides on a desperate gamble; to go with Amelia to Tycho. His fears are realized when he gets back to base and finds that his contract has been leased out to Chandler Brill by Chris' backers. Brill wants to do research on a particular form of native wildlife, and this will distract Chris from getting to Tycho and to get back and help Amelia. The story then becomes a wirewalk as Chris has to juggle his new charge and his trip to adventure. Then things go really wrong.
Simak's fiction was changing by the time that he first wrote and published this. He was beginning to rack up accolades for some of his more insightful and mature fictions. He had already published the City series of stories, the novels Ring Around the Sun and Time and Again and stories like 'The Big Front Yard', 'Crying Jag', and 'All The Traps Of Earth'. The upcoming sixties would be a golden age for Simak with the Hugo award winning novels Time Is the Simplest Thing (Collier Nucleus Fantasy & Science Fiction) and Way Station, The Goblin Reservation and The Werewolf Principle, the two novels that would grandfather in the modern urban fantasy movement, and the classic Why Call Them Back From Heaven?.
"The Trouble With Tycho" was originally published in Cele Goldsmith's October 1960 issue of Amazing Stories, October 1960 with Complete Simak Novel *The Trouble With Tycho* (Volume 34, No. 10) an issue that sported a great cover by the great Alex Schomberg, and which would later turn up as part of an Ace Double with A. Bertram Chandler. This one hundred and fifteen page novella is more of a throwback to the more innocent, and linear plotted action stories that were the mainstay of pulps like "Thrilling Wonder Stories" and "Startling Stories". And with encampments with names like Coonskin and Hunkadory, I'm sure that this story had an influence on Larry Niven's "Known Space" stories.
Simak was a professional newspaper man, like his fellow Wisconsinite writer Jack Olsen, and he had a deceptively intimate, unromantic, and matter-of-fact style that instantly puts you at ease, and that sucks you right into his stories. However, if you're expecting something as good as the previously mentioned stories you'll be disappointed. This is a fast-paced adventure, full of likable characters, action, mystery, romance, and alien close encounters and landscapes. Not Simak's best, but it is a lot of fun, and a good throwback to the fictions of the forties. If you're unfamiliar with his stuff, and you like pulp fiction, this novella would be a good place to start. It would also make a good read for any young reader who's just starting to sample the science fiction genre. I can't help but think that this would make a good movie, but that probably won't happen. This review pertains to the 1976 Ace paperback with the great Michael Whelan cover.
4.0 out of 5 starsChris is a twenty-seven-year-old down-home boy who is trying to hit it rich on the moon as a prospector. He's just getting by however when he stumbles upon a disabled vehicle that has been hit by a meteorite that is/was being operated by Amelia Thompson, and is baking in the lunar sun. It turns out that Amelia's on her way to the fabled, legendary, and feared Tycho crater on a desperate attempt to make it big."He was dead. There was no need to look upon his face, dried and desiccated, mummified by the aridness . . ."
Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2013
The Tycho crater is considered cursed by those on the moon as it is a place where people have been known to have gone, but who then never come back. Realizing that his backers wouldn't wait forever for him to strike it big, he decides on a desperate gamble; to go with Amelia to Tycho. His fears are realized when he gets back to base and finds that his contract has been leased out to Chandler Brill by Chris' backers. Brill wants to do research on a particular form of native wildlife, and this will distract Chris from getting to Tycho and to get back and help Amelia. The story then becomes a wirewalk as Chris has to juggle his new charge and his trip to adventure. Then things go really wrong.
Simak's fiction was changing by the time that he first wrote and published this. He was beginning to rack up accolades for some of his more insightful and mature fictions. He had already published the City series of stories, the novels Ring Around the Sun and Time and Again and stories like 'The Big Front Yard', 'Crying Jag', and 'All The Traps Of Earth'. The upcoming sixties would be a golden age for Simak with the Hugo award winning novels Time Is the Simplest Thing (Collier Nucleus Fantasy & Science Fiction) and Way Station, The Goblin Reservation and The Werewolf Principle, the two novels that would grandfather in the modern urban fantasy movement, and the classic Why Call Them Back From Heaven?.
"The Trouble With Tycho" was originally published in Cele Goldsmith's October 1960 issue of Amazing Stories, October 1960 with Complete Simak Novel *The Trouble With Tycho* (Volume 34, No. 10) an issue that sported a great cover by the great Alex Schomberg, and which would later turn up as part of an Ace Double with A. Bertram Chandler. This one hundred and fifteen page novella is more of a throwback to the more innocent, and linear plotted action stories that were the mainstay of pulps like "Thrilling Wonder Stories" and "Startling Stories". And with encampments with names like Coonskin and Hunkadory, I'm sure that this story had an influence on Larry Niven's "Known Space" stories.
Simak was a professional newspaper man, like his fellow Wisconsinite writer Jack Olsen, and he had a deceptively intimate, unromantic, and matter-of-fact style that instantly puts you at ease, and that sucks you right into his stories. However, if you're expecting something as good as the previously mentioned stories you'll be disappointed. This is a fast-paced adventure, full of likable characters, action, mystery, romance, and alien close encounters and landscapes. Not Simak's best, but it is a lot of fun, and a good throwback to the fictions of the forties. If you're unfamiliar with his stuff, and you like pulp fiction, this novella would be a good place to start. It would also make a good read for any young reader who's just starting to sample the science fiction genre. I can't help but think that this would make a good movie, but that probably won't happen. This review pertains to the 1976 Ace paperback with the great Michael Whelan cover.
Images in this review
- Reviewed in the United States on June 8, 2023Clifford D Simak's The Trouble with Tycho and Cosmic Engineers are a combination novella and novel. The Tycho novella takes place on the moon and depicts a frontier motif with people sponsored to 'prospect' the moon. Tycho crater is sorta of limits due to prior disasters and lost personnel. A group elects to throw caution to the wind to explore the area and discovers remnants of an alien presence that is responsible for past disappearances. The 'Cosmic' novel is futuristic with the solar system settled out to Pluto. A mysterious signal from beyond sets the stage for galactic adventure to save the whole universe and includes an uncreative artificial intelligence, other alien species (including a group intent on letting the universe be destroyed to show up for the start of a new one), and time travel.
These early Simak works display the breadth and depth of his grasp of science fiction and his influence on later authors. These are tales not to be missed.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 26, 2017Having really enjoyed the short work of Clifford D Simak, when I found this short novel I had to give it a go. Its good fun, positing a future where the moon has been settled by humanity, but is still in very much a wild west mode - but apparently minus the hostile Native American tribes. The novel is first person POV, but seamlessly done. The story is really a YA adventure with a little mystery to solve, and a PG rated romance.
So its very slight, but also really readable. Our hero is an engaging small-town everyman, and that’s about all we know about him, or need to. He's gone to the Moon to find the lunar version of el dorado working on exploration, and you really do get the sense the Moon is a different place, one that will kill you in a minute if you aren’t careful.
This is perfect for boys of say 10 and up, with up meaning 80+.
Top reviews from other countries
- miss AReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 24, 2016
3.0 out of 5 stars Three Stars
not so good as his other books