"The only joy in the world is to begin...." Cesare Pavese

"The only joy in the world is to begin...." Cesare Pavese

Friday, March 27, 2020

Wasp (1957) by Eric Frank Russell


A droll, fast, behind-enemy-lines story of sabotage and derring-do. It has some of the same flavor as Wheatley's early Gregory Sallust novels, but without the snobbery.




"....Finally, let's consider this auto smash. We know the cause; the survivor was able to tell us before he died. He said the driver lost control at speed while swiping at a wasp which had flown in through a window and started buzzing around his face."


"It nearly happened to me once."


Ignoring that, Wolf went on, "The weight of a wasp is under half an ounce. Compared with a human being its size is minute, its strength negligible. Its sole armament is a tiny syringe holding a drop of irritant, formic acid, and in this case it didn't even use it. Nevertheless it killed four big men and converted a large, powerful car into a heap of scrap."


"I see the point," agreed Mowry, "but where do I come in?"


"Right here," said Wolf. "We want you to become a wasp."


https://archive.org/details/RusselEricFrankWasp





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