The Halfling and other Stories
Leigh Brackett
351 pages
published in 1973
The Halfling and Other Stories is the sixth book I've read in the Year of Reading Women challenge I set myself after I'd noticed last year how few female written science fiction books I read. I had chosen this because it was something I hadn't read before and I always liked Brackett. Unfortunately it turned out this was one of her lesser collections. The stories don't fit well together, there's no real theme to the collection and some are decidedly on the weak side.
It doesn't help that the first two stories are basically the same. In both there's the hardbitten protagonist falling for a mysterious beautiful alien girl who he knows is trouble yet can't help himself but get involved with, who then turns out to be evil. Worse, in both stories this girl is shown to be representative of her race, their evil part of their biology. It's a bit ...uncomfortable... shall we say, but unfortunately these sort of assumptions are build into the kind of planetary romances Leigh Brackett wrote.
As a genre planetary romance has always been a bit dodgy, an evolutionary offshoot of the Africa adventure story, with a lot of the same racist and colonial assumptions build in. So you have cringing Gandymedian natives, mysterious jungles and alien drums, crazed halfbreeds and all those other tropes recycled from Tarzan. Just because the native races are now Martian or Venusian and coloured green or red instead of black or yellow doesn't make the assumptions behind them any less racist. There's still the idea that the various alien races encountered have existential qualities that each and every member of such a race shares. Leigh Brackett is usually better than this, with those tropes present in her stories but never this blatant as in these first two stories. Her writing style and sense of atmosphere are still present, but the execution is pedestrian, unlike the Eric John Stark story also present.
It isn't all planetary romance in this collection. In fact most of the stories here are rather classic sf puzzle stories, something I don't really associate with Brackett. These stories are okay, but nothing special. The same goes for the whole collection. There aren't any bad stories in here, but apart from Enchantress of Venus, the lone Stark story, there's nothing really outstanding here either. Something for the completists.