Allamagoosa
"Allamagoosa" | |
---|---|
Short story by Eric Frank Russell | |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Science fiction |
Publication | |
Published in | Astounding Science Fiction |
Publication type | magazine |
Publication date | May 1955 |
"Allamagoosa" is a Hugo-winning humorous science fiction short story by the English author Eric Frank Russell, originally published in the May 1955 issue of Astounding.
The story is a satire on the bureaucratic mindset - in this case in a military setting - and on the second-order complications caused by an attempt to evade it. It has been collected in The Hugo Winners (1962), The Best Of Eric Frank Russell (1978), and Major Ingredients: The Selected Short Stories of Eric Frank Russell (2000), as well as a number of other anthologies.[1]
Plot summary
[edit]Shortly after landing at a spaceport in Vega, the military spaceship Bustler is informed of an impending surprise inspection. Captain McNaught recalls the crew from leave and begins a tedious line-by-line inventory of the ship's manifest. To his annoyance, communications officer Burman discovers that the list of equipment they were originally issued includes something called an "offog"; however, no one among the crew has any idea what that is, or even what department it should belong to. While misplacing an issued item is a serious infraction, and asking headquarters to identify the item would be obviously incriminating, McNaught hits upon a solution: operating on the assumption that "offog" must simply be a playful technicians' nickname for some obscure, seldom-used gadget, he orders communications officer Burman to fabricate a small box, outfit it with blinkenlights, and feed the inspecting officer some technobabble regarding its purpose. The ruse works swimmingly; the Bustler passes inspection and departs Vega.
Shortly afterward, the ship is unexpectedly ordered back to Earth for a complete overhaul. An alarmed Burman warns McNaught that the shipyard engineers will immediately recognize his device as a fake. The captain solves this second problem by having Burman discreetly dispose of the "offog," blandly notifying headquarters that the item had "came apart under gravitational stress" when the ship passed close to a star. Two days later, an almost-unprecedented emergency transmission recalls Earth's entire spacefleet to the nearest ports; an equally urgent query is directed specifically to the Bustler, demanding full details surrounding the destruction of the device. A horrified McNaught and Burman belatedly realize that "offog" had been a typo for "off.dog," or "official dog" - the ship's dog, Peaslake, having made several conspicuous appearances in the course of the story. (Furthermore, Peaslake's collar, drinking bowl, and bed had immediately preceded the "offog" on the inventory list, and had been correctly ticked off without McNaught and Burman realizing the connection.) The story ends with the pair numbly awaiting doom.
Reception
[edit]"Allamagoosa" won the 1955 Hugo Award for Best Short Story.[2]
John Joseph Adams has called it "uproariously funny".[3]
James Nicoll has commented that it is "apparently based on an urban legend".[4] In fact, it is essentially a science-fictional retelling of a traditional tall tale, "The Shovewood".[5]
References
[edit]- ^ ISFDB entry
- ^ "Locus Index to SF Awards". Archived from the original on 2010-10-25. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
- ^ Locus Listens to Audio: Reviews by John Joseph Adams, at Locus Online; published July 23, 2004; retrieved September 7, 2017
- ^ One of the gentler voices of the Golden Age: The Best of Eric Frank Russell — Eric Frank Russell, reviewed by James Nicoll, at James Nicoll Reviews; published November 9, 2014; retrieved September 7, 2017
- ^ Ingham, John L. (2010). Into Your Tent: The Life, Work and Family Background of Eric Frank Russell. Plantech (U.K.). ISBN 978-0-9564576-0-8.
External links
[edit]- Allamagoosa title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Allamagoosa at webarchive of scifi.com