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When Worlds Collide is a 1933 science fiction novel co-written by Edwin Balmer and Philip Wylie; they also co-authored the sequel After Worlds Collide (1934). It was first published as a six-part monthly serial (September 1932 through February 1933) in Blue Book magazine, illustrated by Joseph Franké.
Still Worlds Collide: Philip Wylie and the End of the American Dream. San Bernardino: The Borgo Press, 1980. Volume 30 in The Milford Series "Popular Writers of Today", 63 pages. ISSN 0163-2469; Breit, Harvey "Talk with Philip Wylie" New York Times Book Review (July 3, 1959) Franklin, H. Bruce (2008).
From 1932 to 1933, Philip Wylie and Edwin Balmer wrote "When Worlds Collide". Two rogue planets cause chaos when they enter the solar system. The biggest one, named Bronson Alpha, a kind of giant gas planet, is on collision course with Earth. The smallest one, Bronson Beta, is thought to be habitable.
1934 – After Worlds Collide with Philip Wylie; 1934 – Dragons Drive You; 1936 – The Shield of Silence with Philip Wylie; 1941 – The Torn Letter; 1954 – In His Hands; 1956 – The Candle of the Wicked; 1958 – With All the World Away; 2013 – The Complete Achievements of Luther Trant (the 1910 book with 3 additional stories)
When Worlds Collide is a 1932 science fiction novel by Philip Wylie and Edwin Balmer. ... a 1950 book by Immanuel Velikovsky "Two Worlds Collide", ...
After Worlds Collide (1934) is a sequel to the 1933 science fiction novel, When Worlds Collide. Both novels were co-written by Edwin Balmer and Philip Wylie. After Worlds Collide first appeared as a six-part monthly serial (November 1933 through April 1934) in Blue Book magazine. Much shorter and less florid than the original novel, this one ...
The novel is similar in spirit to such disaster stories as Philip Wylie and Edwin Balmer's When Worlds Collide (1933) and anticipates the theme of John Christopher's The Death of Grass (1956). Dorothy L. Sayers paid tribute to Stewart's The Two Tickets Puzzle in her The Five Red Herrings. She gave him full credit and built on one of his ideas ...
Brave New World (excerpt), Aldous Huxley (1932) Invasion from Mars, Howard Koch (1938) "Edison’s Conquest of Mars" (abridged), Garrett P. Serviss (New York Evening Journal 1898) "The Martians", Olaf Stapledon (Last and First Men 1930) The Time Machine (abridged), H. G. Wells (The New Review 1895)
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