Get Off the Unicorn explained

Get Off the Unicorn
Author:Anne McCaffrey
Cover Artist:Paul Alexander
Country:United States
Language:English
Publisher:Del Rey/Ballantine
Release Date:June 1977
Media Type:Print (paperback)
Pages:xii, 303 pp.
Isbn:0-552-10965-7

Get Off the Unicorn is a collection of science fiction short stories by American writer Anne McCaffrey, first published in paperback by Del Rey Books in June 1977. Eleven of the fourteen stories were previously published in various magazines and anthologies. Initial sales were brisk; two additional printings were required by year's end. Del Rey reprinted Get off the Unicorn regularly throughout the 1970s and 1980s, and its edition remains in print as of 2015. Corgi issued a British edition in 1979 and an Australian edition in 1980.[1] An audiobook based on the Corgi edition was released in 1985.[2] Severn House issued a hardcover edition in 1982.[1]

The title was derived by accident: McCaffrey's working title had been "Get of the Unicorn" but this was misprinted as "Get Off the Unicorn" in Ballantine's roster of unfilled contracts. After McCaffrey's editor, Judy-Lynn del Rey, was repeatedly asked what "Get Off the Unicorn" was, del Rey asked McCaffrey what she could do about that theme.

Contents

Relation to McCaffrey's series

Reception

Evie Wilson and Michael McCue praised the collection, citing McCaffrey's introductory anecdotes as a highlight of the work.[4] Others have commented that the collection's stories "demonstrate the limits of McCaffrey's range of emotions and subjects".[5] McCaffrey biographer Robin Roberts wrote that the collection demonstrates McCaffrey's status in the field, showing "the power and appeal of [her] reputation as an author . . . [and] the power of her name to sell books".[6] Duncan Lunan, however, reviewing the first hardcover edition for the Glasgow Herald, received the collection without enthusiasm; he was particularly critical of "The Smallest Dragonboy", declaring that "the grimness [of the Pern series] has gone, and the grandeur has gone along with it".[7]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?28761 ISFDB publishing history
  2. http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/5602821?selectedversion=NBD4746244 National Library of Australia
  3. Web site: Index to Science Fiction Anthologies and Collections . 2015-09-20 . 2015-09-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150918205435/http://www.philsp.com/homeville/isfac/t150.htm#A2708 . dead .
  4. Book: Gunton. Sharon. Contemporary Literary Criticism. 1981. Gale Research Company. 9780810301078. 283. 15 September 2015.
  5. Book: Cowart. David. Wymer. Thomas L.. Twentieth-century American Science-fiction Writers, Part 2. 1981. Gale Research Company. 18. 9780810309180 . 15 September 2015.
  6. Robin Roberts, Anne McCaffrey: A Life with Dragons, University Press of Mississippi, 2007, p.147
  7. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2507&dat=19821127&id=KMJAAAAAIBAJ&sjid=96UMAAAAIBAJ&pg=5156,5294541&hl=en "The answer lies in the spirit", Glasgow Herald, November 27, 1982