Despite over 50 years as a published author Joseph Heller's reputation is dominated by one book, Catch 22, to an unusual extent. Not that his later fictions are unsatisfactory (Something Happened, in particular, is a powerful and moving novel), but the myth of Catch 22 is so potent that, in the end, Heller gave way to it by re-cycling the characters in his late novel, Closing Time. So it is with this collection - from the title onwards. Catch 22 appears in discarded chapters, a dramatisation (the hilarious illogic of Clevinger's Trial), dummy runs for Closing Time (none too convincing), commentary on the film, even a travel piece about Heller's return to the places where he spent the war. Interesting to find that, in his war-time career as in Yossarian's, Avignon was the deadly mission that he never forgot, but the original of Snowden survived. As the previous reviewer observed, it's easier to enjoy this if you know and love Catch 22 - but, then, doesn't everybody? The early short stories are a mixed bag, suggesting that Catch 22 came out of left field - there is no hint of its manic surrealism in any of them. Some hard-boiled tales work well enough, but to me the most effective are those which follow in the great American tradition of exploring characters in a crisis of (in)decision, with no explanation of what's gone before and mere hints of what will follow, full of irony and bruised morality: Girl from Greenwich, for instance, or Nothing to be Done, or even the previously unpublished From Dawn to Dusk.