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A collection of short stories including:
Consider Her Ways (1956)
Odd (1961)
Oh, Where, Now, Is Peggy MacRafferty? (1961)
Stitch in Time (1961)
Random Quest (1961)
A Long Spoon (1960)
Consider Her Ways: Jane Waterleigh has no memory of her past wakes up and discovers that she is a mother of some description, in a bloated body that is not her own.
Odd: A tale of how an ordinary man profited from an extraordinary time paradox when he stops to help a man seemingly lost and confused, and then learns the reasons why.
Stitch in Time: An elderly lady reflecting on a lost love and, thanks to her sons' experiments with time, finally discovering the reason why her lover abandoned her so many years ago.
Oh Where, Now, is Peggy MacRafferty?: A social satire on Hollywood glamour in which a bright, individual young Irish woman becomes part of the celebrity circuit, and loses all that makes her special in the process of becoming a star.
Random Quest: Combines romance and parallel universes.
A Long Spoon: The story of how a demon is summoned by mistake and the lengths the couple that invoked him have to go to get rid of him without losing their souls in the bargain.
Reviews with the most likes.
Like any collection of unrelated stories, this is a mixed bag.
Of the stories, I particularly like and periodically reread “Odd” and “Stitch in Time”, which are both rather poignant little time-travel stories. In the first case, an accidental time-jump seems to have a beneficial effect; in the second case, its effect is unfortunate in at least one way, although the overall balance of effects is hard to assess (a common problem).
“Random Quest” is a somewhat similar story, although the jump is sideways in time, rather than forwards: it's an alternative-world story. I like it a little less, but I also reread it.
“A Long Spoon” is a light-hearted fantasy story, mildly amusing, with a little twist at the end.
“Oh, Where, Now, is Peggy MacRafferty?” is a tedious story that may have seemed more original when it was written than it does now.
And finally we have the title story, the novella called “Consider Her Ways”, which I usually avoid because I find it repulsive. It's about a future world with no men, only women; but that's not inherently repulsive. I think it's repulsive because Wyndham (a male writer, born in 1903) deliberately made it so. Sigh.