Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Surface Tension (short story)

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Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1952

Author
  
James Blish

Media type
  
Print (Magazine)

Originally published
  
1952

Country
  
United States of America

Surface Tension (short story) imagesgrassetscombooks1406998275l17828354jpg

Genre(s)
  
Science fiction short story

Similar
  
James Blish books, Other books

"Surface Tension" is a science fiction short story by James Blish originally published in 1952. As collected in Blish's The Seedling Stars, it was revised to incorporate material from his earlier story "Sunken Universe", published in Super Science Stories in 1942.

Contents

Plot summary

A human colonization ship crash-lands on a distant planet which is earth-like but whose only landmass is completely covered in shallow puddles of water and mostly microscopic life forms. Normal humans could not survive on this planet, so the crew must genetically engineer their descendants into something that can survive. (Blish coined the term pantropy to refer to this concept.) They decide to create a race of microscopic aquatic humanoids to complete their mission and colonize the planet.

The majority of the story concerns one groups of these genetically engineered colonists and their intelligence, curiosity, and evolving technology. In particular, the tiny aquatic humanoids develop a "space ship", or rather "air ship", which enables them to pierce the previously impenetrable surface tension of the water and travel through what is, to them, hostile space—open air—to other worlds in other puddles of water.

Reception

Surface Tension was among the stories selected in 1970 by the Science Fiction Writers of America as one of the best science fiction short stories published before the creation of the Nebula Awards. As such, it was published in The Science Fiction Hall of Fame Volume One, 1929–1964. It was adapted by George Lefferts as a radio drama for X Minus One in 1956. In this adaptation, the humanoids are part of an experiment running on a doomed Earth.

Anthony Boucher, commenting on the collected version of the story, noted that although Blish might seem "to pass the most remote bounds of scientific extrapolation, . . . the details are worked out in magnificently convincing manner."

References

Surface Tension (short story) Wikipedia