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Text of the novel Heat Sink; John Moore at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database "Slay and Rescue" (1993) [permanent dead link ] in the Library of Congress Online Catalog – select "Moore, John" for works, including his first five novels, by this and other John Moores whom LC has not yet differentiated (2014-07-27)
Paratime series: H. Beam Piper and John F. Carr: Consists of several short stories, one novella, and one novel. The series deals with an advanced civilization that is able to travel between parallel universes with alternate histories, and uses that ability to trade for goods and services that its own, exhausted Earth cannot provide.
The book tells the story in flashbacks during the actual Mars mission of the chronicalised history until the mission's beginning. The point of divergence for this alternate timeline happens on 22 November 1963, where John F. Kennedy survived the assassination (Jacqueline Kennedy was killed, hence the renaming of the Kennedy Space Center as the Jacqueline B. Kennedy Space Center), but was ...
The Looking Glass, or Voyage of the Space Bubble, [citation needed] series is a military novel series created by author John Ringo and centering on the creation of trans-space portals known as "looking glasses" (due to their mirror-like appearance) and the effect their discovery and the discovery of things via the portals have on life on Earth and off it. [1]
Alien Seed by E.C. Tubb (original novel) Android Planet by John Rankine (original novel) Rogue Planet by E.C. Tubb (original novel) Phoenix of Megaron by John Rankine (original novel - US only) Earthfall by E.C. Tubb (original novel - UK only) This concluded the Space: 1999 storyline and had the descendants of the Alphans returning to Earth.
This is a timeline of science fiction as a literary tradition. While the date of the start of science fiction is debated, this list includes a range of ancient, medieval, and Renaissance-era precursors and proto-science fiction as well, as long as these examples include typical science fiction themes and topoi such as travel to outer space and encounter with alien life-forms.
The Scott Saunders Space Adventure series are a series of young adult science-fiction novels written by amateur astronomer Patrick Moore. [1] As its title indicates the series depicts the adventures and trials of young astronaut Scott Saunders. The series consist of six books published from 1977 to 1980.
Issues 1 through 23, 32, 33, and then 35 through 46 were published as Galaxy Science Fiction Novel while issues 24 through 31 and 34 were published as Galaxy Novel. Fred Pohl, who was editor of Galaxy Publishing Co. from 1960-1969, [1] stated in 1967 that the book series showed a loss of $30,000 (equivalent to $274,132 in 2023) between 1950 and ...