Untouched by Human Hands
Untouched by Human Hands is a collection of science fiction short stories by American writer Robert Sheckley. It was first published in 1954 simultaneously by Ballantine Books, both in hardback and paperback.
Contents
The collection includes the following stories :- "The Monsters"
- "Cost of Living"
- "The Altar"
- "Keep Your Shape"
- "The Impacted Man"
- "Untouched by Human Hands"
- "The King's Wishes"
- "Warm"
- "The Demons"
- "Specialist"
- "Seventh Victim"
- "Ritual"
- "Beside Still Waters"
Reception
Critic Groff Conklin reviewed the collection for Galaxy Science Fiction in 1954; although generally favorable, the review claimed that Sheckley was "still trying to discover his own particular bent" and that he "hasn't quite found his footing." Sheckley himself, according to a 1980 interview, was aware of the extreme stylistic diversity of the collection and the fact that some stories were not science fiction in the usual sense of the word:Writing in The New York Times, Villiers Gerson wrote that Sheckley was "a writer not quite like any other forte is his own brand of strange and wonderful humor."Boucher and McComas found it "as brightly individual and entrancing a group of science-fantasies as we've seen in some time." P. Schuyler Miller compared Sheckley to Ray Bradbury, citing his "fresh point of view", his "wry distortions of the familiar", and his "touch of the same poetry." Science fiction historian Michael Ashley, in his 2005 volume on the history of science fiction magazines, praised Sheckley's early work, including "Untouched by Human Hands", for the "sheer lack of sophistication—his ability to run circles around the establishment. Sheckley's work highlights the fact that man's worst enemy is himself."