A civilization confident in its systems believes every problem can be solved by sorting people into the right roles. When a single mission exposes a gap no chart can fill, that confidence is quietly put at risk. Wanted: One Sane Man traps its central figure inside a situation where preparation, procedure, and psychological screening offer no comfort once isolation sets in.
As the journey stretches on, routine becomes pressure and silence becomes an adversary. Physical discomfort is only the beginning. The real danger comes from too much time, too much awareness, and nowhere to escape from either. Each hour forces a reckoning between professional certainty and personal endurance, with no audience and no safety net.
Frank M. Robinson builds tension not through spectacle, but through accumulation. Small failures compound. Minor fears multiply. What starts as an administrative problem becomes an intimate struggle between responsibility and self-preservation. The story never asks whether the mission can succeed—it asks what kind of person can endure it without breaking.
Robinson's fiction often placed human decision-makers inside systems larger than themselves, where efficiency masked blind spots and confidence concealed risk. His work appeared in magazines such as Astounding Science Fiction and Galaxy, and he later became known for novels that examined power, pressure, and institutional control. Wanted: One Sane Man remains one of his sharpest examinations of what happens when a flawless system meets a flawed human reality.