Short story about aliens trading for hydroponicsStory about human space explorers who run into alien telepath...

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Short story about aliens trading for hydroponics


Story about human space explorers who run into alien telepath space crewShort Story: Humans as the bad guysShort story about humans marooned on high gravity planetLooking for a book about aliens on Earth for centuries with a hostile agendaShort Story about aliens outlawing carsShort story from many years ago: the ancient, brilliant, cruel race was EarthlingsShort story about feline-like aliens who go wild about proteinScience Fiction Short Story about ESPShort story about aliens warning humanity not to leave EarthShort story about research/exploration team looking for weapon on some distant planet to defend Earth













13















I am looking for information on a short story that was written probably in the late 60's early 70's. This was part of a short story collection; I can't be certain but it was possibly edited by Groff Conklin.



The story is told from the point of view of the aliens who meet human explorers on a planet they have both landed on. We can tell because of the description that the narrators provide of the humans. I remember specifically they thought the humans skin was ugly - too thin, they could see parts of the circulatory system through the skin.



The aliens are entranced with the human's hydroponic system, have never seen anything like it. The don't explicitly use the term 'hydroponics' since they've never see one before, but evidently food is in short supply and they really need something like this. The aliens, though, have this really cool pop-up survival tent that incorporates life support, power, etc. The humans and aliens swap hydroponics for the tent. Each think they've taken advantage of the other.



At the end, both high-tail it off the planet fearing the others will realize they've been ripped off and change their minds. The final line, said by the alien, is something like "The way they're behaving would make you believe that they - not we - have committed the perfect crime."










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  • Hi there! That's some info already but could you please take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in? For instance did you read that in an anthology (any recollection of the cover?), in a magazine (Analog etc)? Was the word "hydroponics" implied or clearly said?

    – Jenayah
    4 hours ago
















13















I am looking for information on a short story that was written probably in the late 60's early 70's. This was part of a short story collection; I can't be certain but it was possibly edited by Groff Conklin.



The story is told from the point of view of the aliens who meet human explorers on a planet they have both landed on. We can tell because of the description that the narrators provide of the humans. I remember specifically they thought the humans skin was ugly - too thin, they could see parts of the circulatory system through the skin.



The aliens are entranced with the human's hydroponic system, have never seen anything like it. The don't explicitly use the term 'hydroponics' since they've never see one before, but evidently food is in short supply and they really need something like this. The aliens, though, have this really cool pop-up survival tent that incorporates life support, power, etc. The humans and aliens swap hydroponics for the tent. Each think they've taken advantage of the other.



At the end, both high-tail it off the planet fearing the others will realize they've been ripped off and change their minds. The final line, said by the alien, is something like "The way they're behaving would make you believe that they - not we - have committed the perfect crime."










share|improve this question









New contributor




gxf57 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Hi there! That's some info already but could you please take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in? For instance did you read that in an anthology (any recollection of the cover?), in a magazine (Analog etc)? Was the word "hydroponics" implied or clearly said?

    – Jenayah
    4 hours ago














13












13








13








I am looking for information on a short story that was written probably in the late 60's early 70's. This was part of a short story collection; I can't be certain but it was possibly edited by Groff Conklin.



The story is told from the point of view of the aliens who meet human explorers on a planet they have both landed on. We can tell because of the description that the narrators provide of the humans. I remember specifically they thought the humans skin was ugly - too thin, they could see parts of the circulatory system through the skin.



The aliens are entranced with the human's hydroponic system, have never seen anything like it. The don't explicitly use the term 'hydroponics' since they've never see one before, but evidently food is in short supply and they really need something like this. The aliens, though, have this really cool pop-up survival tent that incorporates life support, power, etc. The humans and aliens swap hydroponics for the tent. Each think they've taken advantage of the other.



At the end, both high-tail it off the planet fearing the others will realize they've been ripped off and change their minds. The final line, said by the alien, is something like "The way they're behaving would make you believe that they - not we - have committed the perfect crime."










share|improve this question









New contributor




gxf57 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I am looking for information on a short story that was written probably in the late 60's early 70's. This was part of a short story collection; I can't be certain but it was possibly edited by Groff Conklin.



The story is told from the point of view of the aliens who meet human explorers on a planet they have both landed on. We can tell because of the description that the narrators provide of the humans. I remember specifically they thought the humans skin was ugly - too thin, they could see parts of the circulatory system through the skin.



The aliens are entranced with the human's hydroponic system, have never seen anything like it. The don't explicitly use the term 'hydroponics' since they've never see one before, but evidently food is in short supply and they really need something like this. The aliens, though, have this really cool pop-up survival tent that incorporates life support, power, etc. The humans and aliens swap hydroponics for the tent. Each think they've taken advantage of the other.



At the end, both high-tail it off the planet fearing the others will realize they've been ripped off and change their minds. The final line, said by the alien, is something like "The way they're behaving would make you believe that they - not we - have committed the perfect crime."







story-identification short-stories space-exploration






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gxf57 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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gxf57 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









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edited 4 hours ago







gxf57













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asked 5 hours ago









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gxf57 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






gxf57 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • Hi there! That's some info already but could you please take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in? For instance did you read that in an anthology (any recollection of the cover?), in a magazine (Analog etc)? Was the word "hydroponics" implied or clearly said?

    – Jenayah
    4 hours ago



















  • Hi there! That's some info already but could you please take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in? For instance did you read that in an anthology (any recollection of the cover?), in a magazine (Analog etc)? Was the word "hydroponics" implied or clearly said?

    – Jenayah
    4 hours ago

















Hi there! That's some info already but could you please take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in? For instance did you read that in an anthology (any recollection of the cover?), in a magazine (Analog etc)? Was the word "hydroponics" implied or clearly said?

– Jenayah
4 hours ago





Hi there! That's some info already but could you please take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in? For instance did you read that in an anthology (any recollection of the cover?), in a magazine (Analog etc)? Was the word "hydroponics" implied or clearly said?

– Jenayah
4 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















6














In Value Deceived by H. B. Fyfe (1950)



Story appeared in collection Possible Worlds of Science Fiction edited by Groff Conklin.



The alien home world had all its food crops destroyed by a blight. They are surviving on terrible tasting synthetic food which is in short supply. Alien explorers are frantically trying to find an alternate source of food.



They encounter a human starship. When they are invited inside, the aliens are stunned to see a hydroponic garden. This technology is the key to stopping the famine on their homeworld.



But the aliens play coy, pretending not to be terribly interested. Eventually they manage to get the humans to give them a spare hydroponic set up as an amusing trifle.



They give the humans one of their heating units, which the humans had been pretending to be uninterested in. It gives off heat, but also produces ashes. Things like diamonds, gold nuggest, and chunks of uranium. An amusing trifle.



As they depart, the aliens floor the ship's accelerator to run away, before the humans regret their bargain. To their surprise, the aliens see that the humans are frantically running away as well.



The alien captain thinks




“Anyone would suspect that they—not we—had practically committed theft!”




enter image description here






share|improve this answer


























  • I've taken the liberty of shifting the picture to the bottom (where it's rather less of a distracting element) and added a block-quote

    – Valorum
    57 mins ago






  • 1





    That's the second time in the recent past that a story by H. B. Fyfe has come up in story id. Somehow I've not noticed this author before even though he's firmly in the Golden Age. Finding new authors is one reason I like story IDs. Thanks.

    – Organic Marble
    53 mins ago













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1 Answer
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active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









6














In Value Deceived by H. B. Fyfe (1950)



Story appeared in collection Possible Worlds of Science Fiction edited by Groff Conklin.



The alien home world had all its food crops destroyed by a blight. They are surviving on terrible tasting synthetic food which is in short supply. Alien explorers are frantically trying to find an alternate source of food.



They encounter a human starship. When they are invited inside, the aliens are stunned to see a hydroponic garden. This technology is the key to stopping the famine on their homeworld.



But the aliens play coy, pretending not to be terribly interested. Eventually they manage to get the humans to give them a spare hydroponic set up as an amusing trifle.



They give the humans one of their heating units, which the humans had been pretending to be uninterested in. It gives off heat, but also produces ashes. Things like diamonds, gold nuggest, and chunks of uranium. An amusing trifle.



As they depart, the aliens floor the ship's accelerator to run away, before the humans regret their bargain. To their surprise, the aliens see that the humans are frantically running away as well.



The alien captain thinks




“Anyone would suspect that they—not we—had practically committed theft!”




enter image description here






share|improve this answer


























  • I've taken the liberty of shifting the picture to the bottom (where it's rather less of a distracting element) and added a block-quote

    – Valorum
    57 mins ago






  • 1





    That's the second time in the recent past that a story by H. B. Fyfe has come up in story id. Somehow I've not noticed this author before even though he's firmly in the Golden Age. Finding new authors is one reason I like story IDs. Thanks.

    – Organic Marble
    53 mins ago


















6














In Value Deceived by H. B. Fyfe (1950)



Story appeared in collection Possible Worlds of Science Fiction edited by Groff Conklin.



The alien home world had all its food crops destroyed by a blight. They are surviving on terrible tasting synthetic food which is in short supply. Alien explorers are frantically trying to find an alternate source of food.



They encounter a human starship. When they are invited inside, the aliens are stunned to see a hydroponic garden. This technology is the key to stopping the famine on their homeworld.



But the aliens play coy, pretending not to be terribly interested. Eventually they manage to get the humans to give them a spare hydroponic set up as an amusing trifle.



They give the humans one of their heating units, which the humans had been pretending to be uninterested in. It gives off heat, but also produces ashes. Things like diamonds, gold nuggest, and chunks of uranium. An amusing trifle.



As they depart, the aliens floor the ship's accelerator to run away, before the humans regret their bargain. To their surprise, the aliens see that the humans are frantically running away as well.



The alien captain thinks




“Anyone would suspect that they—not we—had practically committed theft!”




enter image description here






share|improve this answer


























  • I've taken the liberty of shifting the picture to the bottom (where it's rather less of a distracting element) and added a block-quote

    – Valorum
    57 mins ago






  • 1





    That's the second time in the recent past that a story by H. B. Fyfe has come up in story id. Somehow I've not noticed this author before even though he's firmly in the Golden Age. Finding new authors is one reason I like story IDs. Thanks.

    – Organic Marble
    53 mins ago
















6












6








6







In Value Deceived by H. B. Fyfe (1950)



Story appeared in collection Possible Worlds of Science Fiction edited by Groff Conklin.



The alien home world had all its food crops destroyed by a blight. They are surviving on terrible tasting synthetic food which is in short supply. Alien explorers are frantically trying to find an alternate source of food.



They encounter a human starship. When they are invited inside, the aliens are stunned to see a hydroponic garden. This technology is the key to stopping the famine on their homeworld.



But the aliens play coy, pretending not to be terribly interested. Eventually they manage to get the humans to give them a spare hydroponic set up as an amusing trifle.



They give the humans one of their heating units, which the humans had been pretending to be uninterested in. It gives off heat, but also produces ashes. Things like diamonds, gold nuggest, and chunks of uranium. An amusing trifle.



As they depart, the aliens floor the ship's accelerator to run away, before the humans regret their bargain. To their surprise, the aliens see that the humans are frantically running away as well.



The alien captain thinks




“Anyone would suspect that they—not we—had practically committed theft!”




enter image description here






share|improve this answer















In Value Deceived by H. B. Fyfe (1950)



Story appeared in collection Possible Worlds of Science Fiction edited by Groff Conklin.



The alien home world had all its food crops destroyed by a blight. They are surviving on terrible tasting synthetic food which is in short supply. Alien explorers are frantically trying to find an alternate source of food.



They encounter a human starship. When they are invited inside, the aliens are stunned to see a hydroponic garden. This technology is the key to stopping the famine on their homeworld.



But the aliens play coy, pretending not to be terribly interested. Eventually they manage to get the humans to give them a spare hydroponic set up as an amusing trifle.



They give the humans one of their heating units, which the humans had been pretending to be uninterested in. It gives off heat, but also produces ashes. Things like diamonds, gold nuggest, and chunks of uranium. An amusing trifle.



As they depart, the aliens floor the ship's accelerator to run away, before the humans regret their bargain. To their surprise, the aliens see that the humans are frantically running away as well.



The alien captain thinks




“Anyone would suspect that they—not we—had practically committed theft!”




enter image description here







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 58 mins ago









Valorum

406k10929513176




406k10929513176










answered 1 hour ago









Winchell ChungWinchell Chung

6,08412248




6,08412248













  • I've taken the liberty of shifting the picture to the bottom (where it's rather less of a distracting element) and added a block-quote

    – Valorum
    57 mins ago






  • 1





    That's the second time in the recent past that a story by H. B. Fyfe has come up in story id. Somehow I've not noticed this author before even though he's firmly in the Golden Age. Finding new authors is one reason I like story IDs. Thanks.

    – Organic Marble
    53 mins ago





















  • I've taken the liberty of shifting the picture to the bottom (where it's rather less of a distracting element) and added a block-quote

    – Valorum
    57 mins ago






  • 1





    That's the second time in the recent past that a story by H. B. Fyfe has come up in story id. Somehow I've not noticed this author before even though he's firmly in the Golden Age. Finding new authors is one reason I like story IDs. Thanks.

    – Organic Marble
    53 mins ago



















I've taken the liberty of shifting the picture to the bottom (where it's rather less of a distracting element) and added a block-quote

– Valorum
57 mins ago





I've taken the liberty of shifting the picture to the bottom (where it's rather less of a distracting element) and added a block-quote

– Valorum
57 mins ago




1




1





That's the second time in the recent past that a story by H. B. Fyfe has come up in story id. Somehow I've not noticed this author before even though he's firmly in the Golden Age. Finding new authors is one reason I like story IDs. Thanks.

– Organic Marble
53 mins ago







That's the second time in the recent past that a story by H. B. Fyfe has come up in story id. Somehow I've not noticed this author before even though he's firmly in the Golden Age. Finding new authors is one reason I like story IDs. Thanks.

– Organic Marble
53 mins ago












gxf57 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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