Take a photo of a barcode or cover
A review by lamnatos
Astounding Science Fiction, February 1943 by Malcolm Jameson, Henry Kuttner, L. Sprague de Camp, Henry A. Norton, Fox B. Holden, John W. Campbell Jr., Jack Williamson, A.E. van Vogt, J. Francis McComas, Will Stewart, Lewis Padgett, Kolliker, Frank Kramer, C.L. Moore, Webb Marlowe, Colin Keith
4.0
It all boils down to the fact that 'One can no more think like a baby than one can think like a bee.'
An imaginative and inventive investigation into what makes children's minds seems so strange and alien to adults. What if that strangeness was preserved and not smoothed into "adulthood", "reason" and "common sense"? All it takes is a small fictional device and the story's two children are never shoehorned into our plain common reality with its common restrains and rules.
An imaginative and inventive investigation into what makes children's minds seems so strange and alien to adults. What if that strangeness was preserved and not smoothed into "adulthood", "reason" and "common sense"? All it takes is a small fictional device and the story's two children are never shoehorned into our plain common reality with its common restrains and rules.