the video game was pretty awesome too, but the author hated it for some reason.
edit: well, harlan ellison isnt for everybody, but i think calling him ammaturish is a bit hasty. he published this one in 1967, and sci-fi was a bit different back then. granted hed only have been putting out published material for 16 years at that point, and thats a drop in the bucket considering that the old fucker is still writing now. but i think ammaturish is probalby the wrong characterization.
its kind of the old nostolgic whif of the future that you get from people like heinlien and asimov and vonnegut. a little bit amiss from how society and technology has advanced, but pretty insightfull when you consider the time of the writing and that they had no way to fathom how the concepts they were writing about would mature into tangeable things.
its easy to say "yeah, he really missed the boat on AI" or that he didnt understand the implications of the technology hes writing about, but the idea that he was invisioning it AT ALL in an era where it was barely a fantasy -- thats pretty good.
but you probalby meant his prose. some people like it less than others, nothing to be done for that.
edit edit: i dont mean to be overzealous in my defense of mr. ellison, and please dont interperet my lengthy and multi-edited response as inflamatory. though i enjoy some of his work, i really dont consider myself a fan. its perfectly fine not to like his work and to think its sloppy. thats totally cool.
but the story in question did take a Hugo. along with a few other of his works.
http://harlanellison.com/awards.htm