![]() I have never heard that before, and it’s pretty intriguing. Cotts was actually Cele Goldsmith’s sister. In recent correspondence, Robert Silverberg, who succeeded Cotts as Amazing’s book reviewer (after a one column appearance by Lester Del Rey), said that he thought (but was not sure) that S. I have long wondered who Cotts was, and also whether Cotts might have been a woman. Cotts, the book reviewer for Amazing throughout most of Cele Goldsmith’s tenure. The cover is by Alex Schomburg, and the interiors are by Virgil Finlay and Dan Adkins.Ī word about S. Cotts praises highly in terms that make it sound absolutely dreadful and The Synthetic Man, by Theodore Sturgeon, a novel better known as The Dreaming Jewels, which Cotts also likes. ![]() The books reviewed were Level 7, by Mordecai Roshwald, a once famous post-apocalyptic novel, now little-known, which S. The only other feature is a pretty short book review column (it was cut, and the lettercol eliminated, to make room for the complete novel in one issue). Courant is presented as something of a skeptic about computers, though as presented his skepticism seems sensible enough. ![]() ![]() The editorial is given over to a reprint of part of an interview with an Emeritus Professor of Mathematics from New York University, Richard Courant, that had been published in Challenge. ![]() This is an earlyish Cele Goldsmith issue. ![]()
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