The World Beyond the Hill: Science Fiction and the Quest for Transcendence (118 page)

BOOK: The World Beyond the Hill: Science Fiction and the Quest for Transcendence
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“The Science of Whithering” (de Camp), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd

Science Schools Journal, 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd

Science Wonder Stories, 1
st

Scientifiction, 1
st

“Scientifiction, Searchlight of Science” (Williamson), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd

“The Scientist” (Campbell), 1
st

“The Sea Thing” (van Vogt), 1
st

“The Search” (van Vogt), 1
st

“The Second Solution” (van Vogt), 1
st

Second-Stage Lensman (E. Smith), 1
st

“Secret Unattainable” (van Vogt), 1
st
, 2
nd

“The Seesaw” (van Vogt), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd

Senarens, Luis Philip, 1
st

Seven Famous Novels (Wells), 1
st

Seven Footprints to Satan (Merritt), 1
st

“Shadow of Death” (Heinlein), 1
st

Shakespeare, William, 1
st
, 2
nd

“Shambleau” (Moore), 1
st

She (Haggard), 1
st

Sheehan, Perley Poore, 1
st

Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft, 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd

The Ship of Ishtar (Merritt), 1
st

“Sidewise in Time” (Leinster), 1
st
, 2
nd

Simak, Clifford D., 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th

Sinister Barrier (E. Russell), 1
st

Sixth Column (Heinlein), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd

The Skylark of Space (E. Smith), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th

Skylark of Valeron (E. Smith), 1
st

Skylark Three (E. Smith), 1
st
, 2
nd

Slan (van Vogt), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th

“Slaves of Sleep” (Hubbard), 1
st

The Sleeper Awakes (Wells), 1
st

Sloane, T. O’Conor, 1
st
, 2
nd

Smith, Clark Ashton, 1
st

Smith, E.E., 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th
, 6
th
, 7
th
, 8
th
, 9
th
, 10
th

Smith, George O., 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th

“Solution Unsatisfactory” (Heinlein), 1
st

“Space Rays” (Campbell), 1
st

Spacehounds of IPC (E. Smith), 1
st
, 2
nd

Spengler, Oswald, 1
st
, 2
nd

Spenser, Edmund, 1
st
, 2
nd

Stapledon, Olaf, 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th
, 6
th

Star Bridge (Williamson/Gunn), 1
st

Star Maker (Stapledon), 1
st
, 2
nd

Star of Empire (Williamson), 1
st
, 2
nd

“The Star Stealers” (Hamilton), 1
st

Star Trek, 1
st

Star Wars, 1
st

The Steam Man of the Prairies (Ellis), 1
st

Stewart, Will (pseud. Williamson), 1
st

“The Stolen Bacillus” (Wells), 1
st

The Stolen Bacillus and Other Incidents (Wells), 1
st

“The Stolen Dormouse” (de Camp), 1
st

Stone, Charles, 1
st

“The Storm” (van Vogt), 1
st

“A Story of the Days to Come” (Wells), 1
st
, 2
nd

“A Story of the Stone Age” (Wells), 1
st

“Stowaway” (Asimov), 1
st

“Strange Playfellow” (Asimov), 1
st

Street & Smith, 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th
, 6
th
, 7
th
, 8
th
, 9
th

Stuart, Don A. (pseud. Campbell), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th

Stubbs, Harry (see pseud. Hal Clement), 1
st
, 2
nd

A Study of History (Toynbee), 1
st

A Study of the Solar System (Campbell), 1
st

Sturgeon, Theodore, 1
st

“Sunken Universe” (Blish), 1
st

Supernatural Horror in Literature (Lovecraft), 1
st

T

“A Tale of the Twentieth Century” (Wells), 1
st

Tales of Space and Time (Wells), 1
st

Tales of the Alhambra (Irving), 1
st

Tarzan and the Ant Men (Burroughs), 1
st

Tarzan of the Apes (Burroughs), 1
st
, 2
nd

“There Ain’t No Such!” (de Camp), 1
st

“They” (Heinlein), 1
st
, 2
nd

The Thing (1951), 1
st

The Thing (1982) 1
st

Thrilling Wonder Stories, 1
st

“Through the Dragon Glass” (Merritt), 1
st

Time and the Gods (Dunsany), 1
st
, 2
nd

“Time Locker” (Kuttner/Moore), 1
st
, 2
nd

The Time Machine (Wells), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th
, 6
th
, 7
th

Timmins, William, 1
st

Tolkien, J.R.R., 1
st

“Too Good at Guessing” (Campbell), 1
st

“Tools for Brains” (Vernon), 1
st

Toynbee, Arnold, 1
st
, 2
nd

The Tramp (Hubbard), 1
st
, 2
nd

Tremaine, F. Orlin, 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th

“Trends” (Asimov), 1
st
, 2
nd

Triplanetary (E. Smith), 1
st

Turgot, Anne Robert Jacques, 1
st

Twain, Mark, 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (Verne), 1
st
, 2
nd

“Twilight” (Campbell), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd

“Two Sought Adventure” (Leiber), 1
st

2001: A Space Odyssey, 1
st

“The Twonky” (Kuttner/Moore), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd

“Typewriter in the Sky” (Hubbard), 1
st

U

“The Ultimate Adventure” (Hubbard), 1
st

Under the Moons of Mars (Burroughs), 1
st
, 2
nd

“Universe” (Heinlein), 1
st
, 2
nd

Unknown/Unknown Worlds, 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th

“The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall” (Poe), 1
st

“The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag” (Heinlein), 1
st

Utopia (More), 1
st

V

van Vogt, A.E., 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th
, 6
th
, 7
th

“Vault of the Beast” (van Vogt), 1
st

Verne, Jules, 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th

Vernon, Leo, 1
st

The Violent Man (van Vogt), 1
st

The Voyage of the Space Beagle (van Vogt), 1
st

A Voyage to Arcturus (Lindsay), 1
st

W

“The Wabbler” (Leinster), 1
st

“Waldo” (Heinlein), 1
st

Walpole, Horace, 1
st

Wandrei, Donald, 1
st

The War Against the Rull (van Vogt), 1
st

The War of the Worlds (Wells), 1
st
, 2
nd

The Warlord of Mars (Burroughs), 1
st

“The Warrior Race” (de Camp), 1
st

We (Zamiatin), 1
st

“ ‘—We Also Walk Dogs’ ” (Heinlein), 1
st

The Weapon Makers (van Vogt), 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd

“The Weapon Shop” (van Vogt), 1
st
, 2
nd

Weinbaum, Stanley G., 1
st
, 2
nd

A Weird Adventure on Mars (Burroughs), 1
st
, 2
nd

Weird Tales 1
st
, 2
nd

The Well at the World’s End (Morris), 1
st

Wellman, Manly Wade, 1
st

Wells, H.G., 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th
, 6
th
, 7
th
, 8
th
, 9
th
, 10
th
, 11
th
, 12
th

“We’re Not All Human” (Campbell), 1
st

“What Happened After the Battle of Dorking, or The Victory of Tunbridge Wells” (Stone), 1
st

“What Was It? A Mystery” (O’Brien), 1
st

“When the Atoms Failed” (Campbell), 1
st

When the Sleeper Wakes (Wells), 1
st

“The Whisperer in Darkness” (Lovecraft), 1
st

White, William Anthony Parker, 1
st

White Fang (London), 1
st

Whitehead, Alfred North, 1
st
, 2
nd

“Who Goes There?” (Campbell), 1
st

Williamson, Jack, 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th
, 5
th
, 6
th
, 7
th
, 8
th

Wilson, William, 1
st

“With Folded Hands” (Williamson), 1
st

“Within the Nebula” (Hamilton), 1
st

Wonder Stories, 1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th

The Wood Beyond the World (Morris), 1
st

“The World Is Mine” (Kuttner/ Moore), 1
st
, 2
nd

The World of Null-A (van Vogt), 1
st
, 2
nd

“The World of the Red Sun” (Simak), 1
st

The Worm Ouroboros (Eddison), 1
st
, 2
nd

Wright, S. Fowler, 1
st

X

“Xanadu” (Coleridge), 1
st

“Xipéhuz, Les” (Rosny aîné), 1
st

Z

Zamiatin, Yevgeny, 1
st

Zit and Xoe (Curwen), 1
st

“With Folded Hands” (Williamson), 1
st

“Within the Nebula” (Hamilton), 1
st

Wonder Stories,
1
st
, 2
nd
, 3
rd
, 4
th

The Wood Beyond the World
(Morris), 1
st

“The World Is Mine” (Kuttner/ Moore), 1
st
, 2
nd

The World of Null-A
(van Vogt), 1
st
, 2
nd

“The World of the Red Sun” (Simak), 1
st

The Worm Ouroboros
(Eddison), 1
st
, 2
nd

Wright, S. Fowler, 1
st

Also by Alexei and Cory Panshin

Earth Magic

Haldane, the young son of the Get warlord Black Morca, encounters a witch in the woods who unsettles his composure with prophecies of strange events and major changes. Morca’s ambitions arouse mistrust and anger among the other Get lords, and soon Haldane finds himself fleeing for his life with only a wizard of uncertain skills as his companion. Their journey will take them through hidden realms, to a decisive moonlit battle on Stone Heath amid the great menhirs, a place charged with earth magic and bloody memory.

Farewell to Yesterday’s Tomorrow

An excellent companion to Alexei Panshin’s novels,
Farewell to Yesterday's Tomorrow
collects twelve of his best stories, the last a novella written in collaboration with his wife, Cory. From the universe of the Nebula Award-winning
Rite of Passage
, to the first manned exploration of Neptune, to the interstellar quest of a fair lady and a noble beastman to find a home, these engaging fantasies turn the idea of SF as escape on its head, dramatizing how technology may give new expression to empathy and self-sacrifice but never replace them.

Also by Alexei Panshin

New Celebrations: The Adventures of Anthony Villiers

A space-operatic comedy of manners and meditation on life, a cheerful noir thriller,
New Celebrations
contains the first three, and so far only, novels about the enigmatic Anthony Villiers, a young man who trails both a mysterious past and a six-foot furred toad companion whose papers are not in order. From a space-station gambling resort, to a nice camping venue in a nature reserve, to the masquerade on Delbalso, Villiers tours many odd social circles of the interstellar Nashuite Empire. Hounded by want of cash, by assassins and, worse, bureaucrats, he remains polite, has fun, and makes an impression. Meet him and see.

Rite of Passage

In 2198, one hundred and fifty years after the desperate wars that destroyed an overpopulated Earth, humanity lives precariously on a hundred hastily-established colony worlds and in the seven giant Ships that once ferried people to the stars. Mia Havero’s Ship is a small, closed society. It tests its children by casting them out to live or die in a month of Trial in the hostile wilds of a colony planet. Mia’s fourteenth birthday and accompanying Trial are fast approaching; in the meantime she must learn not only the skills that will keep her alive but the deeper courage to face herself and her world. Originally published in 1968, Alexei Panshin’s Nebula Award-winning classic has lost none of its relevance, with its keen exploration of societal stagnation and the resilience of youth.

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