The Last of the Deliverers : The Argument That Would Not Die

What happens when the last true believers of a shattered era walk into a town that has simply stopped caring?

In a quiet Ohio community built on small farms, shared tools, and unhurried days, an old Republican and a wandering Communist collide in open daylight. Each carries a lifetime of conviction. Each believes he understands what the country needs. And each is certain the other is responsible for everything that went wrong. But the people around them are not fighting for markets or movements. They plant, weave, sing, hunt, and love without asking who owns the future.

Poul Anderson sets this confrontation inside a society that has drifted beyond old arguments without ever declaring victory. There are no towering corporations. There is no central authority demanding obedience. There are no factories roaring for growth. Instead, there are town meetings, shared machinery, modest trade, and a stubborn refusal to chase more than is needed. For the townsfolk, comfort is enough. For the two old men, comfort is betrayal.

As the day unfolds, their debate grows sharper. The children watch. The elders listen with patience that slowly thins. The past refuses to release its grip, even as the present shrugs and turns away. What begins as a clash of words becomes something more personal, more desperate. The town can tolerate disagreement. It cannot escape the weight of memory.

The question is not which ideology wins. The question is whether belief, once forged in hardship, can survive in a world that has lost the taste for struggle. And when the final argument takes place out of sight, the cost lands quietly on everyone who thought they were beyond such things.

Poul Anderson published this story in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1958, during a career that produced more than a hundred novels and countless short stories. He won seven Hugo Awards along the way.

Über dieses Buch

What happens when the last true believers of a shattered era walk into a town that has simply stopped caring?

In a quiet Ohio community built on small farms, shared tools, and unhurried days, an old Republican and a wandering Communist collide in open daylight. Each carries a lifetime of conviction. Each believes he understands what the country needs. And each is certain the other is responsible for everything that went wrong. But the people around them are not fighting for markets or movements. They plant, weave, sing, hunt, and love without asking who owns the future.

Poul Anderson sets this confrontation inside a society that has drifted beyond old arguments without ever declaring victory. There are no towering corporations. There is no central authority demanding obedience. There are no factories roaring for growth. Instead, there are town meetings, shared machinery, modest trade, and a stubborn refusal to chase more than is needed. For the townsfolk, comfort is enough. For the two old men, comfort is betrayal.

As the day unfolds, their debate grows sharper. The children watch. The elders listen with patience that slowly thins. The past refuses to release its grip, even as the present shrugs and turns away. What begins as a clash of words becomes something more personal, more desperate. The town can tolerate disagreement. It cannot escape the weight of memory.

The question is not which ideology wins. The question is whether belief, once forged in hardship, can survive in a world that has lost the taste for struggle. And when the final argument takes place out of sight, the cost lands quietly on everyone who thought they were beyond such things.

Poul Anderson published this story in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1958, during a career that produced more than a hundred novels and countless short stories. He won seven Hugo Awards along the way.

Starte noch heute mit diesem Buch für 0 €

  • Hole dir während der Testphase vollen Zugriff auf alle Bücher in der App
  • Keine Verpflichtungen, jederzeit kündbar
Jetzt kostenlos testen
Mehr als 52 000 Menschen haben Nextory im App Store und auf Google Play 5 Sterne gegeben.

  1. 50 Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories 3 - More than 31 hours of Vintage Science Fiction : Retro Futures and Atomic Dreams from Sci-Fi’s Greatest Minds

    James Blish, Edward W. Ludwig, Arthur C. Clarke, Jack Vance, I. M. Bukstein, Harry Harrison, Robert Silverberg, Ross Rocklynne, Lester del Rey, Clifford D. Simak, Fredric Brown, Poul Anderson, John Bernard Daley, Paul Ernst, Henry Slesar, Frederik Pohl, H.G. Wells, Charles L. Fontenay, Robert Sheckley, Murray Leinster, Isaac Asimov, Frank Belknap Long, Sol Boren, Fritz Leiber, Evan Hunter, George O. Smith, Algis Budrys, Ray Bradbury, Philip K Dick

  2. 3.5

    The High Crusade

    Poul Anderson

  3. Neu

    Lost Sci-Fi Books 301 thru 305 : Five Golden Age Science Fiction Adventures Filled with Wonder and Discovery

    Poul Anderson, Mack Reynolds, John Victor Peterson, Mary Carlson, David Mason

  4. Neu

    1950s Science Fiction 14 : From Martian Storms to Distant Colonies—Twenty-Two Vintage Sci-Fi Adventures

    Fritz Leiber, Robert Moore Williams, Jerome Bixby, Walter M. Jr., David Mason, James Blish, Ralph Williams, Robert Sheckley, Poul Anderson, R. J. Rice, Kenneth Harmon, Sam Merwin, Jr., Helen Huber, Millard Grimes, Chester S Geier, Bryce Walton, Paul W. Fairman, Elaine Wilber, Lester del Rey, Fox B. Holden

  5. Neu

    Vintage Sci-Fi 26 : Robots, Space Mysteries and Adventures Beyond the Stars

    Ralph Williams, Walter M. Jr., Robert Abernathy, Ben Bova, Hayden Howard, Jack Sharkey, James Blish, Frank Belknap Long, Jerome Bixby, Larry Eisenberg, Hal K. Wells, David Mason, Robert Sheckley, Merab Eberle, Poul Anderson, R. J. Rice, A. Bertram Chandler, Kenneth Harmon

  6. Neu

    1950s Science Fiction 5 - 19 Science Fiction Short Stories From the 1950s : Rocket Men and Rogue Machines: Vintage Visions from the 1950s

    Philip K Dick, Charles L. Fontenay, Robert Silverberg, Isaac Asimov, Harry Walton, Harry Harrison, Lester del Rey, Edward W. Ludwig, Frederik Pohl, Robert Sheckley, Poul Anderson, Algis Budrys

  7. Neu

    1950s Science Fiction 13 - 27 Science Fiction Short Stories From the 1950s : Alien Visitors, Martian Adventures, And Strange Discoveries From 1950s Science Fiction

    Frank Belknap Long, Philip José Farmer, Lester del Rey, Frank M. Robinson, Robert Moore Williams, Michael Shaara, Sam Merwin, Jr., Robert Sheckley, Randall Garrett, Winston Marks, Dave Dryfoos, Stephen Marlowe, William Oberfield, Alan J. Ramm, Joe Gibson, Alfred Coppel, Ross Rocklynne, Alan E. Nourse, Arthur Sellings, Ann Griffith, Lucius Daniel, Allyn Donnelson, Poul Anderson, Robert Abernathy

  8. Neu

    50 Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories 11 : 50 Classic Adventures Across Space, Time, and the Unknown

    Frederik Pohl, Frank Belknap Long, Winston Marks, Philip José Farmer, Stephen Marlowe, Alan J. Ramm, Joe Gibson, William Oberfield, Stephen Bartholomew, Lester del Rey, Alfred Coppel, Dave Dryfoos, Frank M. Robinson, Robert Moore Williams, Ross Rocklynne, Alan E. Nourse, Arthur Sellings, Ann Griffith, Lucius Daniel, Michael Shaara, Sam Merwin, Jr., Allyn Donnelson, Henry Kuttner, Robert Sheckley, E. M. Hull, Thorp McClusky, Victor Rousseau, Theodore Sturgeon, Randall Garrett, A. Bertram Chandler, Poul Anderson, Ben Bova, William Shedenhelm, Robert Abernathy, Fritz Leiber, Jack Williamson, Sewel Peaslee Wright, Jack Sharkey, Hayden Howard, Hal K. Wells, Jerome Bixby, Walter M. Jr.

  9. Aliens and Nothing But Aliens 3

    Philip K Dick, Evan Hunter, Poul Anderson, Robert Zacks, Fredric Brown, Robert Silverberg, Clifford D. Simak, Ray Bradbury, Allen K. Lang, Isaac Asimov, Henry Kuttner, Theodore Sturgeon

  10. Science Fiction Grand Masters : From Asimov to Ellison—Timeless Sci-Fi by the Genre’s Greatest Minds

    Arthur C. Clarke, Isaac Asimov, Robert Silverberg, Damon Knight, Fritz Leiber, Clifford D. Simak, Harry Harrison, Poul Anderson, Frederik Pohl, Harlan Ellison, Ray Bradbury, Lester del Rey

  11. Science Fiction Grand Masters 6

    Jack Williamson, Nelson S. Bond, Harry Harrison, Robert Silverberg, Fritz Leiber, Arthur C. Clarke, Robert Sheckley, Philip José Farmer, Lester del Rey, Poul Anderson, Hal Clement, William F. Nolan, Brian W. Aldiss, Frederik Pohl