Short story where a flexible reality hardens to an unchanging oneShort story: Earth in a pocket of non-causalityShort story where rain only on one side of the house gives away fake world?Short story where dolphins repopulate the landShort story collection with one story about a fictional drugShort story from many years ago where the two main characters merge into oneShort story where time runs backwardsAugmented Reality cult short story - Infiltrating agent is won overShort story where everyone must be equalStory where father's books became realityShort story - three kids, one wish eachShort story where Neanderthals are like supermen

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Short story where a flexible reality hardens to an unchanging one


Short story: Earth in a pocket of non-causalityShort story where rain only on one side of the house gives away fake world?Short story where dolphins repopulate the landShort story collection with one story about a fictional drugShort story from many years ago where the two main characters merge into oneShort story where time runs backwardsAugmented Reality cult short story - Infiltrating agent is won overShort story where everyone must be equalStory where father's books became realityShort story - three kids, one wish eachShort story where Neanderthals are like supermen






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








15















In this story, the narrator describes his day as ordinary objects change their physical properties. The floor might suddenly become fluid beneath one's foot, and you'd better get it out fast before the floor becomes solid again. Food on the plate may turn poisonous without any apparent cause. Mountains march on the horizon as the sky changes color. Life is a series of challenges and emergencies that people take in their stride.



It all changes abruptly one day as everything hardens into an unchanging reality. No more inconveniences, but also no more marching mountains in a golden sky. The narrator can't stand the boredom of it, but no one else seems to notice the change.



Read in English in the 1960s or 1970s, probably in an anthology.










share|improve this question




























    15















    In this story, the narrator describes his day as ordinary objects change their physical properties. The floor might suddenly become fluid beneath one's foot, and you'd better get it out fast before the floor becomes solid again. Food on the plate may turn poisonous without any apparent cause. Mountains march on the horizon as the sky changes color. Life is a series of challenges and emergencies that people take in their stride.



    It all changes abruptly one day as everything hardens into an unchanging reality. No more inconveniences, but also no more marching mountains in a golden sky. The narrator can't stand the boredom of it, but no one else seems to notice the change.



    Read in English in the 1960s or 1970s, probably in an anthology.










    share|improve this question
























      15












      15








      15


      1






      In this story, the narrator describes his day as ordinary objects change their physical properties. The floor might suddenly become fluid beneath one's foot, and you'd better get it out fast before the floor becomes solid again. Food on the plate may turn poisonous without any apparent cause. Mountains march on the horizon as the sky changes color. Life is a series of challenges and emergencies that people take in their stride.



      It all changes abruptly one day as everything hardens into an unchanging reality. No more inconveniences, but also no more marching mountains in a golden sky. The narrator can't stand the boredom of it, but no one else seems to notice the change.



      Read in English in the 1960s or 1970s, probably in an anthology.










      share|improve this question














      In this story, the narrator describes his day as ordinary objects change their physical properties. The floor might suddenly become fluid beneath one's foot, and you'd better get it out fast before the floor becomes solid again. Food on the plate may turn poisonous without any apparent cause. Mountains march on the horizon as the sky changes color. Life is a series of challenges and emergencies that people take in their stride.



      It all changes abruptly one day as everything hardens into an unchanging reality. No more inconveniences, but also no more marching mountains in a golden sky. The narrator can't stand the boredom of it, but no one else seems to notice the change.



      Read in English in the 1960s or 1970s, probably in an anthology.







      story-identification short-stories






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      share|improve this question











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      asked 8 hours ago









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          2 Answers
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          12














          Is it possible this is "The Petrified World" (1968) by Robert Sheckley? It was in his collection Can You Feel Anything When I Do This? (1973).



          The protagonist, Lanigan, is from a much more mutable world than ours:




          Lanigan looked at his watch. "Six-fifteen." But as he said it, the hour hand jumped convulsively forward. "No, it's five to seven."




          He has a conversation with his neighbor Torstein in which we observe normal changes in his world:




          "Well, Tom, how's the boy?" Torstein greeted him."



          "Fine," Lanigan said, "just fine." He nodded pleasantly and began to walk away under a melting green sky. [...]



          "I can't really afford a vacation this month," Lanigan said. (The sky was ochre and pink now-, three pines had withered; an aged oak had turned into a youthful cactus.)




          It's Torstein who mentions mountains in a golden sky:




          "Trees and lakes," Torstein was rhapsodizing. "The feel of grass growing under your feet, the sight of tall black mountains marching across a golden sky--"




          Lanigan ultimately ends up stuck in his nightmare; our "petrified" (immutable) world.




          The street at first seemed like any normal city street. There were paving stones, cars, people, buildings, a sky overhead, a sun in the sky. All perfectly normal. Except that nothing was happening.



          The pavement never once yielded beneath his feet. Over there was the First National City Bank; it had been here yesterday, which was bad enough; but worse it would be there without fail tomorrow, and the day after that, and the year after that. The First National City Bank (Founded 1892) was grotesquely devoid of possibilities. It would never become a tomb, an airplane, the bones of a prehistoric monster. Sullenly it would remain a building of concrete and steel, madly persisting in its fixity until men with tools came and tediously tore it down.



          Lanigan walked through this petrified world, under a blue sky that oozed a sly white around the edges, teasingly promising something that was never delivered. Traffic moved implacably to the right, people crossed at crossings, clocks were within minutes of agreement.




          The story was originally published in If, February 1968; you can read it at archive.org.






          share|improve this answer

























          • These are both good answers, but IMHO this is it.

            – Organic Marble
            2 hours ago


















          10














          This sounds a bit like The Men Return by Jack Vance, previously identified as the answer to Short Story -- earth in a pocket of non-causality. This was written in 1957, so it fits your time frame, and it matches in some ways but differs in others.



          In the words of the story:




          Then came the terrible hour when Earth swam into a pocket of non-causality, and all the ordered tensions of cause-effect dissolved.




          The result is randomness just as you describe. For example it has surfaces going liquid then solid again:




          He tested the surface of the plain with his foot. The glassy surface (though it likewise seemed a construction of red and gray-green pyramids) accepted his weight, then suddenly sucked at his leg. In a frenzy he tore himself free, jumped back, squatted on the temporarily solid rock.




          And food becoming randomly poisonous:




          The Relict cared nothing for this; he needed food and out on the plain were plants. They would suffice in lieu of anything better. They grew in the ground, or sometimes on a floating lump of water, or surrounding a core of hard black gas. There were dank black flaps of leaf, clumps of haggard thorn, pale green bulbs, stalks with leaves and contorted flowers. There were no recognizable species, and the Relict had no means of knowing if the leaves and tendrils he had eaten yesterday would poison him today.




          At the end of the story Earth leaves the pocket of non-causality:




          The shrouded sky was gone; the sun rode proud and bright in a sea of blue. The ground below churned, cracked, heaved, solidified. They felt the obsidian harden under their feet; its color shifted to glossy black. The Earth, the sun, the galaxy, had departed the region of freedom; the other time with its restrictions and logic was once more with them.




          The problem is that the story isn't narrated and there is nothing about the narrator feeling bored with the new permanence. I also can't find any reference to marching mountains, in a golden sky or otherwise. Finally the randomness is not something humans take in their stride. Indeed it has reduced humanity (the aforementioned Relicts) to only five survivors. So in these respects the story doesn't match your description.






          share|improve this answer



























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            2 Answers
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            2 Answers
            2






            active

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            active

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            active

            oldest

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            12














            Is it possible this is "The Petrified World" (1968) by Robert Sheckley? It was in his collection Can You Feel Anything When I Do This? (1973).



            The protagonist, Lanigan, is from a much more mutable world than ours:




            Lanigan looked at his watch. "Six-fifteen." But as he said it, the hour hand jumped convulsively forward. "No, it's five to seven."




            He has a conversation with his neighbor Torstein in which we observe normal changes in his world:




            "Well, Tom, how's the boy?" Torstein greeted him."



            "Fine," Lanigan said, "just fine." He nodded pleasantly and began to walk away under a melting green sky. [...]



            "I can't really afford a vacation this month," Lanigan said. (The sky was ochre and pink now-, three pines had withered; an aged oak had turned into a youthful cactus.)




            It's Torstein who mentions mountains in a golden sky:




            "Trees and lakes," Torstein was rhapsodizing. "The feel of grass growing under your feet, the sight of tall black mountains marching across a golden sky--"




            Lanigan ultimately ends up stuck in his nightmare; our "petrified" (immutable) world.




            The street at first seemed like any normal city street. There were paving stones, cars, people, buildings, a sky overhead, a sun in the sky. All perfectly normal. Except that nothing was happening.



            The pavement never once yielded beneath his feet. Over there was the First National City Bank; it had been here yesterday, which was bad enough; but worse it would be there without fail tomorrow, and the day after that, and the year after that. The First National City Bank (Founded 1892) was grotesquely devoid of possibilities. It would never become a tomb, an airplane, the bones of a prehistoric monster. Sullenly it would remain a building of concrete and steel, madly persisting in its fixity until men with tools came and tediously tore it down.



            Lanigan walked through this petrified world, under a blue sky that oozed a sly white around the edges, teasingly promising something that was never delivered. Traffic moved implacably to the right, people crossed at crossings, clocks were within minutes of agreement.




            The story was originally published in If, February 1968; you can read it at archive.org.






            share|improve this answer

























            • These are both good answers, but IMHO this is it.

              – Organic Marble
              2 hours ago















            12














            Is it possible this is "The Petrified World" (1968) by Robert Sheckley? It was in his collection Can You Feel Anything When I Do This? (1973).



            The protagonist, Lanigan, is from a much more mutable world than ours:




            Lanigan looked at his watch. "Six-fifteen." But as he said it, the hour hand jumped convulsively forward. "No, it's five to seven."




            He has a conversation with his neighbor Torstein in which we observe normal changes in his world:




            "Well, Tom, how's the boy?" Torstein greeted him."



            "Fine," Lanigan said, "just fine." He nodded pleasantly and began to walk away under a melting green sky. [...]



            "I can't really afford a vacation this month," Lanigan said. (The sky was ochre and pink now-, three pines had withered; an aged oak had turned into a youthful cactus.)




            It's Torstein who mentions mountains in a golden sky:




            "Trees and lakes," Torstein was rhapsodizing. "The feel of grass growing under your feet, the sight of tall black mountains marching across a golden sky--"




            Lanigan ultimately ends up stuck in his nightmare; our "petrified" (immutable) world.




            The street at first seemed like any normal city street. There were paving stones, cars, people, buildings, a sky overhead, a sun in the sky. All perfectly normal. Except that nothing was happening.



            The pavement never once yielded beneath his feet. Over there was the First National City Bank; it had been here yesterday, which was bad enough; but worse it would be there without fail tomorrow, and the day after that, and the year after that. The First National City Bank (Founded 1892) was grotesquely devoid of possibilities. It would never become a tomb, an airplane, the bones of a prehistoric monster. Sullenly it would remain a building of concrete and steel, madly persisting in its fixity until men with tools came and tediously tore it down.



            Lanigan walked through this petrified world, under a blue sky that oozed a sly white around the edges, teasingly promising something that was never delivered. Traffic moved implacably to the right, people crossed at crossings, clocks were within minutes of agreement.




            The story was originally published in If, February 1968; you can read it at archive.org.






            share|improve this answer

























            • These are both good answers, but IMHO this is it.

              – Organic Marble
              2 hours ago













            12












            12








            12







            Is it possible this is "The Petrified World" (1968) by Robert Sheckley? It was in his collection Can You Feel Anything When I Do This? (1973).



            The protagonist, Lanigan, is from a much more mutable world than ours:




            Lanigan looked at his watch. "Six-fifteen." But as he said it, the hour hand jumped convulsively forward. "No, it's five to seven."




            He has a conversation with his neighbor Torstein in which we observe normal changes in his world:




            "Well, Tom, how's the boy?" Torstein greeted him."



            "Fine," Lanigan said, "just fine." He nodded pleasantly and began to walk away under a melting green sky. [...]



            "I can't really afford a vacation this month," Lanigan said. (The sky was ochre and pink now-, three pines had withered; an aged oak had turned into a youthful cactus.)




            It's Torstein who mentions mountains in a golden sky:




            "Trees and lakes," Torstein was rhapsodizing. "The feel of grass growing under your feet, the sight of tall black mountains marching across a golden sky--"




            Lanigan ultimately ends up stuck in his nightmare; our "petrified" (immutable) world.




            The street at first seemed like any normal city street. There were paving stones, cars, people, buildings, a sky overhead, a sun in the sky. All perfectly normal. Except that nothing was happening.



            The pavement never once yielded beneath his feet. Over there was the First National City Bank; it had been here yesterday, which was bad enough; but worse it would be there without fail tomorrow, and the day after that, and the year after that. The First National City Bank (Founded 1892) was grotesquely devoid of possibilities. It would never become a tomb, an airplane, the bones of a prehistoric monster. Sullenly it would remain a building of concrete and steel, madly persisting in its fixity until men with tools came and tediously tore it down.



            Lanigan walked through this petrified world, under a blue sky that oozed a sly white around the edges, teasingly promising something that was never delivered. Traffic moved implacably to the right, people crossed at crossings, clocks were within minutes of agreement.




            The story was originally published in If, February 1968; you can read it at archive.org.






            share|improve this answer















            Is it possible this is "The Petrified World" (1968) by Robert Sheckley? It was in his collection Can You Feel Anything When I Do This? (1973).



            The protagonist, Lanigan, is from a much more mutable world than ours:




            Lanigan looked at his watch. "Six-fifteen." But as he said it, the hour hand jumped convulsively forward. "No, it's five to seven."




            He has a conversation with his neighbor Torstein in which we observe normal changes in his world:




            "Well, Tom, how's the boy?" Torstein greeted him."



            "Fine," Lanigan said, "just fine." He nodded pleasantly and began to walk away under a melting green sky. [...]



            "I can't really afford a vacation this month," Lanigan said. (The sky was ochre and pink now-, three pines had withered; an aged oak had turned into a youthful cactus.)




            It's Torstein who mentions mountains in a golden sky:




            "Trees and lakes," Torstein was rhapsodizing. "The feel of grass growing under your feet, the sight of tall black mountains marching across a golden sky--"




            Lanigan ultimately ends up stuck in his nightmare; our "petrified" (immutable) world.




            The street at first seemed like any normal city street. There were paving stones, cars, people, buildings, a sky overhead, a sun in the sky. All perfectly normal. Except that nothing was happening.



            The pavement never once yielded beneath his feet. Over there was the First National City Bank; it had been here yesterday, which was bad enough; but worse it would be there without fail tomorrow, and the day after that, and the year after that. The First National City Bank (Founded 1892) was grotesquely devoid of possibilities. It would never become a tomb, an airplane, the bones of a prehistoric monster. Sullenly it would remain a building of concrete and steel, madly persisting in its fixity until men with tools came and tediously tore it down.



            Lanigan walked through this petrified world, under a blue sky that oozed a sly white around the edges, teasingly promising something that was never delivered. Traffic moved implacably to the right, people crossed at crossings, clocks were within minutes of agreement.




            The story was originally published in If, February 1968; you can read it at archive.org.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 4 hours ago

























            answered 4 hours ago









            DavidWDavidW

            10.4k4 gold badges46 silver badges89 bronze badges




            10.4k4 gold badges46 silver badges89 bronze badges












            • These are both good answers, but IMHO this is it.

              – Organic Marble
              2 hours ago

















            • These are both good answers, but IMHO this is it.

              – Organic Marble
              2 hours ago
















            These are both good answers, but IMHO this is it.

            – Organic Marble
            2 hours ago





            These are both good answers, but IMHO this is it.

            – Organic Marble
            2 hours ago













            10














            This sounds a bit like The Men Return by Jack Vance, previously identified as the answer to Short Story -- earth in a pocket of non-causality. This was written in 1957, so it fits your time frame, and it matches in some ways but differs in others.



            In the words of the story:




            Then came the terrible hour when Earth swam into a pocket of non-causality, and all the ordered tensions of cause-effect dissolved.




            The result is randomness just as you describe. For example it has surfaces going liquid then solid again:




            He tested the surface of the plain with his foot. The glassy surface (though it likewise seemed a construction of red and gray-green pyramids) accepted his weight, then suddenly sucked at his leg. In a frenzy he tore himself free, jumped back, squatted on the temporarily solid rock.




            And food becoming randomly poisonous:




            The Relict cared nothing for this; he needed food and out on the plain were plants. They would suffice in lieu of anything better. They grew in the ground, or sometimes on a floating lump of water, or surrounding a core of hard black gas. There were dank black flaps of leaf, clumps of haggard thorn, pale green bulbs, stalks with leaves and contorted flowers. There were no recognizable species, and the Relict had no means of knowing if the leaves and tendrils he had eaten yesterday would poison him today.




            At the end of the story Earth leaves the pocket of non-causality:




            The shrouded sky was gone; the sun rode proud and bright in a sea of blue. The ground below churned, cracked, heaved, solidified. They felt the obsidian harden under their feet; its color shifted to glossy black. The Earth, the sun, the galaxy, had departed the region of freedom; the other time with its restrictions and logic was once more with them.




            The problem is that the story isn't narrated and there is nothing about the narrator feeling bored with the new permanence. I also can't find any reference to marching mountains, in a golden sky or otherwise. Finally the randomness is not something humans take in their stride. Indeed it has reduced humanity (the aforementioned Relicts) to only five survivors. So in these respects the story doesn't match your description.






            share|improve this answer





























              10














              This sounds a bit like The Men Return by Jack Vance, previously identified as the answer to Short Story -- earth in a pocket of non-causality. This was written in 1957, so it fits your time frame, and it matches in some ways but differs in others.



              In the words of the story:




              Then came the terrible hour when Earth swam into a pocket of non-causality, and all the ordered tensions of cause-effect dissolved.




              The result is randomness just as you describe. For example it has surfaces going liquid then solid again:




              He tested the surface of the plain with his foot. The glassy surface (though it likewise seemed a construction of red and gray-green pyramids) accepted his weight, then suddenly sucked at his leg. In a frenzy he tore himself free, jumped back, squatted on the temporarily solid rock.




              And food becoming randomly poisonous:




              The Relict cared nothing for this; he needed food and out on the plain were plants. They would suffice in lieu of anything better. They grew in the ground, or sometimes on a floating lump of water, or surrounding a core of hard black gas. There were dank black flaps of leaf, clumps of haggard thorn, pale green bulbs, stalks with leaves and contorted flowers. There were no recognizable species, and the Relict had no means of knowing if the leaves and tendrils he had eaten yesterday would poison him today.




              At the end of the story Earth leaves the pocket of non-causality:




              The shrouded sky was gone; the sun rode proud and bright in a sea of blue. The ground below churned, cracked, heaved, solidified. They felt the obsidian harden under their feet; its color shifted to glossy black. The Earth, the sun, the galaxy, had departed the region of freedom; the other time with its restrictions and logic was once more with them.




              The problem is that the story isn't narrated and there is nothing about the narrator feeling bored with the new permanence. I also can't find any reference to marching mountains, in a golden sky or otherwise. Finally the randomness is not something humans take in their stride. Indeed it has reduced humanity (the aforementioned Relicts) to only five survivors. So in these respects the story doesn't match your description.






              share|improve this answer



























                10












                10








                10







                This sounds a bit like The Men Return by Jack Vance, previously identified as the answer to Short Story -- earth in a pocket of non-causality. This was written in 1957, so it fits your time frame, and it matches in some ways but differs in others.



                In the words of the story:




                Then came the terrible hour when Earth swam into a pocket of non-causality, and all the ordered tensions of cause-effect dissolved.




                The result is randomness just as you describe. For example it has surfaces going liquid then solid again:




                He tested the surface of the plain with his foot. The glassy surface (though it likewise seemed a construction of red and gray-green pyramids) accepted his weight, then suddenly sucked at his leg. In a frenzy he tore himself free, jumped back, squatted on the temporarily solid rock.




                And food becoming randomly poisonous:




                The Relict cared nothing for this; he needed food and out on the plain were plants. They would suffice in lieu of anything better. They grew in the ground, or sometimes on a floating lump of water, or surrounding a core of hard black gas. There were dank black flaps of leaf, clumps of haggard thorn, pale green bulbs, stalks with leaves and contorted flowers. There were no recognizable species, and the Relict had no means of knowing if the leaves and tendrils he had eaten yesterday would poison him today.




                At the end of the story Earth leaves the pocket of non-causality:




                The shrouded sky was gone; the sun rode proud and bright in a sea of blue. The ground below churned, cracked, heaved, solidified. They felt the obsidian harden under their feet; its color shifted to glossy black. The Earth, the sun, the galaxy, had departed the region of freedom; the other time with its restrictions and logic was once more with them.




                The problem is that the story isn't narrated and there is nothing about the narrator feeling bored with the new permanence. I also can't find any reference to marching mountains, in a golden sky or otherwise. Finally the randomness is not something humans take in their stride. Indeed it has reduced humanity (the aforementioned Relicts) to only five survivors. So in these respects the story doesn't match your description.






                share|improve this answer















                This sounds a bit like The Men Return by Jack Vance, previously identified as the answer to Short Story -- earth in a pocket of non-causality. This was written in 1957, so it fits your time frame, and it matches in some ways but differs in others.



                In the words of the story:




                Then came the terrible hour when Earth swam into a pocket of non-causality, and all the ordered tensions of cause-effect dissolved.




                The result is randomness just as you describe. For example it has surfaces going liquid then solid again:




                He tested the surface of the plain with his foot. The glassy surface (though it likewise seemed a construction of red and gray-green pyramids) accepted his weight, then suddenly sucked at his leg. In a frenzy he tore himself free, jumped back, squatted on the temporarily solid rock.




                And food becoming randomly poisonous:




                The Relict cared nothing for this; he needed food and out on the plain were plants. They would suffice in lieu of anything better. They grew in the ground, or sometimes on a floating lump of water, or surrounding a core of hard black gas. There were dank black flaps of leaf, clumps of haggard thorn, pale green bulbs, stalks with leaves and contorted flowers. There were no recognizable species, and the Relict had no means of knowing if the leaves and tendrils he had eaten yesterday would poison him today.




                At the end of the story Earth leaves the pocket of non-causality:




                The shrouded sky was gone; the sun rode proud and bright in a sea of blue. The ground below churned, cracked, heaved, solidified. They felt the obsidian harden under their feet; its color shifted to glossy black. The Earth, the sun, the galaxy, had departed the region of freedom; the other time with its restrictions and logic was once more with them.




                The problem is that the story isn't narrated and there is nothing about the narrator feeling bored with the new permanence. I also can't find any reference to marching mountains, in a golden sky or otherwise. Finally the randomness is not something humans take in their stride. Indeed it has reduced humanity (the aforementioned Relicts) to only five survivors. So in these respects the story doesn't match your description.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 7 hours ago

























                answered 7 hours ago









                John RennieJohn Rennie

                35.5k2 gold badges113 silver badges164 bronze badges




                35.5k2 gold badges113 silver badges164 bronze badges



























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