Last updated 3/26/08
Key West 2720 A.D (Knights, 1989.)
The US has disintegrated into warring city states. Key West, unlike the rest of the former country, has provided a haven for homosexuals, but someone is plotting against the current government in order to change that policy.
EARDLEY-WILMOT, CAPTAIN S.
Next Naval War, The (Stanford, 1894.)
Future war between England and France.
EARLS, BILL
Gladiator, The (Dell, 1981.)
In the near future, half time at football games features gladiatorial battles to the death.
EARNSHAW, BRIAN
Dragonfall Five and the Empty Planet (Methuen, 1973, Lothrop, Lee, & Shepard, 1976.)
Dragonfall Five #3.
?
Dragonfall Five and the Haunted World (Methuen, 1979.)
Dragonfall Five #7.
?
Dragonfall Five and the Hijackers (Methuen, 1974.)
Dragonfall Five #4.
?
Dragonfall Five and the Master Mind (Methuen, 1975._
Dragonfall Five #5.
?
Dragonfall Five and the Royal Beast (Methuen, 1972, Morrow, 1975.)
Dragonfall Five #2.
?
Dragonfall Five and the Space Cowboys (Methuen, 1972, Morrow, 1975.)
Dragonfall Five #1.
?
Dragonfall Five and the Super Horse (Methuen, 1977.)
Dragonfall Five #6.
?
Planet in the Eye of Time (Hodder, 1968.)
Time travel back to the time of the Crucifixion.
Starclipper and the Galactic Final (Methuen, 1987.)
Starclipper #3.
?
Starclipper and the Snowstone (Methuen, 1986.)
Starclipper #2.
?
Starclipper and the Song Wars (Methuen, 1985.)
Starclipper #1.
?
EASTERMAN, DANIEL (Pseudonym of Dennis McEoin. Writes horror fiction as Jonathan Aycliffe.)
Name of the Beast (Harper, 1992.)
Marginal thriller set at the onset of the millennium with terrorist organizations taking advantage of the general instability following the rising of a plague and a new religion appears in the deserts of Egypt.
EASTON, M. COLEMAN (Also writes Fantasy.)
Swimmers Beneath the Bright (Popular Library/Questar, 1987.)
The last survivors of humanity are genetically engineered to live on an ocean world, but their future is in jeopardy when an ancient enemy appears in that solar system.
Alien Resonance (Wildside, 2000.)
Mysterious alien eggs drop from space. Those who find them are moved to friendship and the government begins to think aliens are preparing us for an invasion.
Bigfoot Stalks the Coast of Maine and Other Twisted Downeast Tales (Wildside, 2000.)
Collection of related stories about strange events in a small town.
Electric Gene Machine, The (Wildside, 2000.)
An Organic Future collection.
Collection of related short stories.
Firefight (Betancourt, 2003.)
After ecoterrorists release a radioactive cloud in the US, a new construction project is plagued by mysterious events.
Great Flying Saucer Conspiracy, The (Wildside, 2002.)
Aliens have come to stay on Earth, but are they really telling the human race the whole truth about their motivation?
Greenhouse (Ace, 1991.)
Organic Future #2.
An orphan who seeks to find his original family discovers that the genetic engineering which has transformed the world has not been limited to lower animals, but applied in forbidden human applications as well.
Seeds of Destiny (Ace, 1994.)
Organic Future #5.
The machine enthusiasts have seized power and driven genetic engineering right out of the solar system. The refugees are regrouping on another world, but the powers now holding Earth are determined to hunt them down and liquidate them forever.
Silicon Karma (Borealis, 1997.)
Humans are reunited with their dead friends and lovers when their personalities are uploaded into a virtual reality world, but this leads to the predictable complexities when they find that people have changed even after death. And then someone external to the system begins manipulating their environment as well.
Sparrowhawk (Ace, 1990.)
Organic Future #1.
Bio-engineering has become the main source of human advancement, with tailored animals performing most of the work of the world. So when someone begins turning out organic assassins, the authorities are understandably afraid that things have gotten out of hand.
Stones of Memory (Wildside, 2000.)
Following a worldwide ecological collapse, civilization is slowly rebuilding. Aiding the survivors are the programmed "stones" which contain the knowledge of the past, but hindering them are religious fanatics who destroy the stones whenever they can.
Tower of the Gods (Ace, 1993.)
Organic Future #4.
Scientists are growing ever more ambitious with their genetic engineering projects, until one backfires and threatens to topple the complex society humanity has created and extended to the stars.
Unto the Last Generation (Wildside, 2002.)
?
Woodsman (Ace, 1992.)
Organic Future #3.
A machine oriented terrorist group attempts to sabotage plans by society to genetically interbreed humans with animals and even plants to create more flexible organic devices.
Book of the Still, The (BBC, 2002.)
A Doctor Who novel.
A conspiracy to discover the location of people who have lost themselves in time.
EBERLE, MERAB
Thought Translator, The (Stellar, 1930.)
Not seen.
ECCARIUS, J.G. (Also writes Horror.)
Resurrection 2027 (III Publishing, 1995.)
Confusing and confused account of woman in 2027 who is the reincarnation of someone who died in one of the plagues of the Millennium.
ECKERT, ALLAN W. (Also writes Fantasy.)
Hab Theory, The (Little, Brown, 1976, Popular Library, 1977.)
Long, scientifically flawed story of a disaster caused when the Arctic gets so heavy with ice that the Earth falls over on its side, endangering “all life in the universe”.
ECKLAR, JULIA (See also L.A. Graf.)
Kobayashi Maru, The (Pocket, 1989.)
A Star Trek novel.
Kirk and several crew members are cast adrift in a disabled shuttlecraft and help pass the time by retelling their experiences as young cadets at Starfleet.
Regenesis (Ace, 1995.)
Episodic novel published as separate stories about the efforts to save various Earth species by transporting them to other planets where they can fit into the existing ecology.
ECKSTROM, JACK DENNIS
Time of the Hedrons (Avalon, 1968.)
Psychics rule a post apocalyptic world.
EDELMAN, DAVIS LOUIS
Infoquake (Solaris, 2008, Pyr, 2008.)
Jump 225 #1.
Battle for control of a new technology.
Multireal (Pyr, 2008.)
Jump 224 #2.
A new technology threatens an aristocracy of the future.
EDGAR, KEN
Frogs at the Bottom of the Well (Playboy, 1976.)
Marginal thriller about a female FBI agent infiltrating a radical feminist terrorist organization that has control of a nuclear weapon.
EDGAR, KENNETH
Starfire (Boxwood, 1961.)
A child builds a device to travel to other worlds.
EDGAR, PETER (Pseudonym of Peter Edgar King Kingscott.)
Cities of the Dead (Digit, 1963.)
Nuclear testing causes mutations among various sea creatures resulting in a tenfold increase in their size in this pleasant but minor “B” movie story.
EDMONDS, HARRY
North Sea Mystery, The (Ward Lock, 1930.)
Future war story in which missiles are poised to destroy the British fleet.
Professor’s Last Experiment, The (Rich & Cowan, 1935. MacDonald, 1946, as The Secret Voyage.)
A world war is halted by the introduction of a new weapon.
Red Invader (Ward Lock, 1933.)
Germany and Russia plot to invade England.
Riddle of the Straits, The (Ward Lock, 1931.)
Future war between England and Japan vs the US and Russia.
Rockets (Operation Manhattan), The (MacDonald, 1951.)
Future war novel in which rockets are used to attack New York City.
Secret Voyage, The. (See The Professor’s Last Experiment.)
EDMONDS, HELEN (Pseudonym of Anna Kavan, whom see.)
Ice (Owen, 1967.)
A new ice age threatens the world following a nuclear war.
EDMONDSON, G.C. (See also collaborations which follow and also with Andrew J. Offutt as John Cleve.)
Aluminum Man, The (Berkley, 1975.)
An alien stranded on Earth gives a human the secret of a strain of bacteria that produces natural aluminum. They begin producing the metal in their backyard, and attract the enmity of several major industrialists.
Blue Face (DAW, 1972. Doubleday, 1971, Hale, 1973, as Chapayeca.
An anthropologist discovers that there is a genuine alien living with a tribe of Southwest Indians, but what he thinks will rejuvenate his career is actually a terrible danger that will change his life forever.
Chapayeca. (See Blue Face.)
Man Who Corrupted Earth, The (Ace, 1980.)
The story of a group of entrepreneurs whose avarice overcomes the short sighted attitude of the human race by compelling them to begin relocating industry into space.
Ship That Sailed the Timestream, The (Ace, 1965, bound with Stranger Than You Think, also by Edmondson. Ace, alone, 1978, Arrow, 1971.)
Ship #1
A modern day naval sailing ship encounters a freak storm that sends it back through the time to the days of the Vikings where they have a series of adventures before being returned in similar fashion to their own era.
Stranger Than You Think (Ace, 1965, bound with The Ship That Sailed the Timestream, also by Edmondson.)
Collection of related stories.
T.H.E.M. (Doubleday, 1974.)
?
To Sail the Century Sea (Ace, 1981.)
Ship #2.
The Navy finally admits that one of their ships actually traveled through time, and now they’ve found a way to duplicate the feat. And so they send a mission back in an unwise attempt to alter the course of history.
EDMONDSON, G.C. & KOTLAN, C.M.
Black Magician, The (Del Rey, 1986.)
Cunningham #2.
The protagonist has learned that the new intelligence enhancing treatment offered to the public involves a parasitic lifeform, and he can’t understand why the government is hiding that fact, and its cure, from an increasingly susceptible public.
Cunningham Equations, The (Del Rey, 1986.)
Cunningham #1.
An alcoholic scientist is stirred from his usual ennui when someone tries to steal his dog, the first step on a trail that reveals to him a deadly danger. Someone is offering to improve people’s intelligence, but without telling them the price they will pay for the augmentation, which comes with the implantation of a parasite.
Maximum Effort (Del Rey, 1987.)
Cunningham #3.
Cunningham resists the pressure to have a parasite implanted in his own brain, even when those he loves submit to the process and urge him to join them.
Takeover, The (Ace, 1984.)
The Soviets have hidden nuclear weapons in many major US cities and demand that the country surrender. The only hope of freedom is a fleet of nuclear powered and armed submarines and the chance that they can restore the balance of terror.
EDSON, J.T.
Bunduki (Corgi, 1975, DAW, 1976.)
Bunduki #1.
The adopted son of Tarzan of the Apes begins his own series of adventures in this jungle adventure story in which Bunduki and his cousin Dawn are kidnapped to a far world, where he has to overcome various dangers before he can rescue her and return to Africa.
Bunduki and Dawn (Corgi, 1976.)
Bunduki #2.
Once again the jungle warrior must escape his captors on the planet Zillikian and rescue his cousin Dawn from another primitive tribe.
Fearless Master of the Jungle (Corgi, 1980.)
Bunduki #4.
This time Bunduki’s cousin Dawn gets to help rescue him from yet another primitive but nasty tribal leader.
Sacrifice for the Quagga God (Corgi, 1976.)
Bunduki #3.
Bunduki must rescue his cousin yet again, this time from a priest who wants to use her for human sacrifice, while simultaneously preventing the introduction of gunpowder to the primitive planet to which he has been abducted.
EDSTROM, O.E.
Epp’s Trip to the Moon (House of Field, 1945.)
Not seen.
EDWARDS, DAVID
Next Stop - Mars! (Greenwich, 1960.)
The first expedition to Mars.
EDWARDS, GAWAIN (Pseudonym of G. Pendray.)
Earth-Tube, The, Appleton, 1929.
Oriental armies attack South America through an enormous tunnel.
EDWARDS, NICHOLAS
Arachnophobia (Scholastic, 1990, from the screenplay by Don Jakoby, Al Williams, and Leslie Strick.)
Marginal thriller about unusual killer spiders accidentally imported into a small town.
EDWARDS, NORMAN (Collaboration between Terry Carr and Ted White, both of whom also see.)
Invasion from 2500 (Monarch, 1964.)
Invaders from a parallel world open a breach through space and time near Chicago and begin to attack with highly advanced weapons. Standard and not particularly convincing invasion story.
EDWARDS, PAUL (House pseudonym. Not all volumes in the series were SF but all are listed for informational purposes.)
Brain Scavengers, The (Pyramid, 1973.)
Expeditor #2.
A spy rescues kidnapped American scientists from a secret Soviet base experimenting on human brains.
Deadly Cyborgs, The (Pyramid, 1975.)
Expeditor #9.
Biologically altered humans, cyborgs, are operating in the Himalayas where they are mistaken for abominable snowmen.
Death Devils, The (Pyramid, 1974.) (Robert Lory.)
Expeditor #8.
The Chinese have genetically engineered a new insect which could potentially destroy the entire agricultural base of the free world.
Fist of Fatima, The (Pyramid, 1973.) (Robert Lory.)
Expeditor #4.
Not SF.
Glyphs of Gold, The (Pyramid, 1974.) (Robert Lory.)
Expeditor #6.
Marginal adventure set in a lost city in the Yucatan.
Green Goddess, The (Pyramid, 1975.)
Expeditor #12.
The Communists have discovered a new metal that provides a cheap electrical source.
Holocaust Auction, The (Pyramid, 1975.) (Robert Lory.)
Expeditor #10
A brutal murder leads to the uncovering of a secret sale of a revolutionary new bomb that could destroy the world.
Ice Goddess, The (Pyramid, 1974.)
Expeditor #7.
A kidnapped scientist is connected to a new technology that is melting the polar ice caps and threatening the world.
Laughing Death, The (Pyramid, 1973.) (Robert Lory.)
Expeditor #3.
Marginal thriller about a madman with a new poison gas he plans to use in highly populated areas.
Needles of Death (Pyramid, 1973.)
Expeditor #1.
A secret agent invades Communist China in order to destroy a superweapon that could result in the defeat of the West.
Operation Weatherkill (Pyramid, 1975.)
Expeditor #13.
An evil genius develops weather control devices with which he can cause floods.
Poppies of Death (Pyramid, 1975.)
Expeditor #11.
Not SF but included because the rest of the series is. Routine spy thriller involving the drug trade.
Valley of Vultures (Pyramid, 1973.)
Expeditor #5.
A secret agent discovers the sinister secret behind a research institute that seems to be able to restore youth.
EDWARDS, PETER
Terminus (Macmillan, 1976.)
Not seen. After the holocaust in Africa.
EFFINGER, GEORGE ALEC (See also collaboration with Jack Chalker & Mike Resnick, and with Gardner Dozois. Also writes Fantasy.)
Bird of Time, The (Doubleday, 1986, New English Library, 1988.)
Time #2.
A spoof of changewar stories, with a time tourist discovering something very strange in the Great Library of Alexandria and being recruited to help restore the proper flow of time.
Budayeen Nights (Golden Gryphon, 2003.)
Collection of mostly unrelated stories.
Death in Florence. (See Utopia 3.)
Dirty Tricks (Doubleday, 1978.)
Collection of unrelated stories.
Escape to Tomorrow (Award, 1975.)
Planet of the Apes TV #2.
Two episodes from the series, adapted from the scripts by Barry Oringer, Anthony Lawrence, Joe Ruby, & Ken Spears.
Exile Kiss, The (Doubleday, 1991, Easton, 1991, Tor, 2006.)
Marid #3.
Marid and his employer are running for their lives when a long time rival strikes unexpectedly, cutting them off from their power base.
Fire in the Sun, A (Bantam, 1990, Orb, 2006.)
Marid #2.
Marid is working as a police officer when he uncovers a terrorist campaign that claims the life of his partner and threatens his own.
Heroics (Doubleday, 1979.)
Entropy #2.
In a future when wealth is meaningless because machines provide everything people want, boredom is endemic and interpersonal relationships are the key to having an interesting life. But sometimes things go amusingly wrong.
Idle Pleasures (Berkley, 1983.)
Collection of unrelated stories.
Irrational Numbers (Doubleday, 1976.)
Collection of unrelated stories.
Journey into Terror (Award, 1975.)
Planet of the Apes TV #3.
Two episodes from the series, adapted from the scripts by David P. Lewis, Booker Bradshaw, & Robert Hamner.
League of Dragons (Prima, 1997.)
A Castle Falkenstern novel.
Sherlock Holmes battles Fu Manchu.
Live! From Planet Earth (Golden Gryphon, 2005.)
Collection of unrelated stories.
Look Away (Axolotl, 1990.)
Short novel about an alternative US history where the South prevailed during the Civil War.
Man the Fugitive (Award, 1974.)
Planet of the Apes TV #1.
Two episodes from the series, adapted from the scripts by Edward J. Lakso amd Robert W. Lenski.
Maureen Birnbaum, Barbarian Swordsperson (Guild America, 1993.)
Collection of related stories about a plucky woman’s unlikely adventures.
Mixed Feelings (Harper, 1974.)
Collection of unrelated stories.
Nick of Time, The (Doubleday, 1985, New English Library, 1987.)
Time #1.
Humorous piece about the first time traveler who gets stuck for a while in the past, then is launched on an episodic journey through history.
Old Funny Stuff, The (Pulphouse, 1989.)
Collection of mostly unrelated stories.
Relatives (Harper & Row, 1973, Dell, 1976.)
Three separate but associated stories of the same character in three alternate worlds, including one where Germany won the first world war.
Schrodinger’s Kitten (Pulphouse, 1992. Originally published in magazine form in 1988.)
Short story pamphlet about a woman who can see the future.
Those Gentle Voices (Warner, 1976.)
The first interstellar expedition from Earth is launched to a star from which intelligent radio signals have been received, but when they arrive, they find far more than they expected.
Thousand Deaths, A (Golden Gryphon, 2007.)
Collection of related stories.
Utopia 3 (Playboy, 1980. Doubleday, 1978, as Death in Florence.)
Comic satire about an artificial society created in the middle of Europe in the near future.
What Entropy Means to Me (Doubleday, 1972, Signet, 1973.)
Entropy #1.
Indescribably funny story that about the many hilarious ways in which science, and the world, can go horribly wrong. Features an attack by a giant radish.
When Gravity Fails (Arbor House, 1986, Bantam, 1988, Easton, 1993, Orb, 2005.)
Marid #1.
The Arab nations dominate the world of the future. The protagonist is forced to accept surgery to make him a more efficient killer in service of a legitimized crime lord who wants him as a weapon against his rivals.
Wolves of Memory, The (Putnam, 1981, Berkley, 1982.)
TECT is the governing force on Earth. It gives you a chance to pursue any career you wish. But when the protagonist fails three times running, he is sent to another planet where he is certain to fit in, along with the race’s other misfits.
EFREMOV, IVAN (See Ivan Yefremov.)
EGAN, DORIS (See also Jane Emerson.)
Complete Ivory, The (DAW, 2001.)
Omnibus of the Ivory trilogy.
Gate of Ivory, The (DAW, 1989.)
Ivory #1.
A hybrid novel about a planet where magic works, although there are hints that it may just be an unimaginable superscience. A visitor from offworld comes to do research, gets into trouble, and discovers that she has magical abilities of her own.
Guilt-Edged Ivory (DAW, 1992.)
Ivory #3.
The heroine is falsely accused of murder to dispose of a political rival of her lover’s family, and must find the real guilty party to prove her own innocence.
Two-Bit Heroes (DAW, 1992.)
Ivory #2.
An offworlder and a local are investigating conditions in a remote part of Ivory when they are captured by outlaws after being chased by the local authorities who believe them to be thieves themselves. Ultimately they discover the source of the unrest in the region, and bring it to an end.
EGAN, GREG (Also writes Fantasy.)
Axiomatic (Millennium, 1995, Harper, 1997, Gollancz, 2008.)
Collection of unrelated stories.
Diaspora (Millenium, 1997, Harper, 1998, Gollancz, 2008.)
Humans expand into the universe by putting minds into computers and robots. As three diverse types of humans propagate, the existence of a rival alien culture causes a crisis.
Distress (Millennium, 1995, Harper, 1997, Gollancz, 2008.)
In a world troubled by a bizarre new drug, an agent takes what is supposed to be a vacation on a remote island hosting an abstruse philosophical congress, and discovers a plot to gain control of the laws of the universe.
Incandescence (Gollancz, 2008.)
Intrigue in a very distant future interstellar civilization.
Luminous (Millennium, 1998, Gollancz, 2008.)
Collection of unrelated stories.
Permutation City (Harper, 1995, Millennium, 1995, Gollancz, 2008.)
In a future when you can achieve a kind of immortality by copying your personality into the internet, there’s a new problem. Those artificial intelligences frequently desire to end their limited existence, which is supposed to be possible, but sometimes the originals prevent them from doing so in order to ensure their own quasi-immortality.
Quarantine (Legend, 1992, Harper, 1995, Millennium, 1999, Gollancz, 2008.)
Aliens enclose the solar system in a force bubble to prevent us from reaching the stars, and this gives rise to millennial cults and other violence on Earth.
Schild’s Ladder (Gollancz, 2002, Tor, 2002.)
In the distant future, an experiment starts a chain reaction that is rapidly spreading through the universe, absorbing entire planets.
Teranesia (Harper, 1999, Gollancz, 1999, Avon, 2000, Millennium, 2000.)
Two children see their parents killed in a military clash on an unnamed island near Indonesia. Years later, they return as members of two separate expeditions, one intent on studying the local wildlife, which exhibits unique characteristics, the other determined to conceal imagined guilt for the past.
EGAN, KEVIN
Perseus Breed, The (Pageant, 1988.)
A man investigates a series of incidents in which beautiful women periodically disappear from the face of the Earth, and uncovers a plot with its origin in a vessel from another world.
EGBERT, H.M. (Also writes Fantasy.)
Draught of Eternity (Long, 1924.)
A drug allows the protagonist to visit the future where America has been conquered.
EGLETON, CLIVE
Judas Mandate, The (Coward, McCann, & Geogheghan, 1972, Hodder, 1972, Pinnacle, 1974.)
David Garnett #3.
The underground is planning to free a number of British political prisoners and smuggle them out of the country so that they can set up a government in exile in North America.
Last Post for a Partisan (Coward, McCann, & Geogheghan, 1971, Hodder, 1971, Pinnacle, 1974.)
David Garnett #2.
British resistance against the Soviet invasion continues, and the underground is forced to take drastic measures against traitors within their own organization.
Piece of Resistance, A (Coward, McCann, & Geogheghan, 1970, Hodder, 1970, Pinnacle, 1974.)
David Garnett #1.
The Russians have occupied the British Isles and the protagonist is a military intelligence officer who becomes a key member in the underground resistance.
State Visit (Hodder, 1976.)
Marginal thriller about the assassination of the Queen of England.
EHRENFELD, DAVID (See collaboration with Carol K. Mack.)
Last Dog on Earth, The (Dell Yearling, 2004.)
Young adult novel about a disease that sweeps the world, turning dogs into killers.
EHRLICH, MAX (Also writes Horror.)
Big Eye, The (Doubleday, 1949, Book League of America, 1950, Bantam, 1950, Dollar Book Club, 1950, Popular Library, 1950, Boardman, 1951, Arrow, 1954, Corgi, 1960.)
Just as the US and Russia seem poised for a nuclear war, a distraction appears in the form of a runaway planet on a collision course with the Earth. As the event approaches, government collapses and chaos sweeps over the world.
Edict, The (Doubleday, 1971, Bantam, 1972, based on the screenplay by the author and Frank De Felitta. Film title was Z.P.G.)
To combat overpopulation, the illogical edict is handed down that no one will give birth for a period of thirty years, so naturally a number of people including the protagonists refuse to comply and become outlaws in order to raise a family.
EIDSON, WILLIAM B.
Blue Helix, The (Vienna, 1999.)
An aging biochemist discovers the secret of restored youth, but he and his wife discover that it isn't as simple to adjust as they expected. They also differ about whether or not to make his discovery public.
EILERS, ROBERT
Hermes Stone, The (Manor, 1979.)
An investigator working with primitive Martian animal life uncovers a great secret when a mysterious crystal drives a placid animal into a violent frenzy.
EINSTEIN, CHARLES
Day New York Went Dry, The (Gold Medal, 1964.)
Near future disaster novel in which a terrible drought hits New York City and the government gives way to violence and anarchy.
EISENBERG, LARRY
Best Laid Schemes, The (Macmillan, 1971, Collier, 1973.)
Collection of connected humorous stories about Duckworth the biochemist.
EISENSTEIN, PHYLLIS (Also writes Fantasy.)
In the Hands of Glory (Pocket, 1981.)
In the waning days of a crumbling galactic empire, a patrol officer discovers that the service no longer deserves her loyalty and that the rebels on a local planet may actually present a better hope for the future of humanity.
Shadow of Earth (Dell, 1979.)
The protagonist finds herself thrust into an alternate world where the Spanish Armada succeeded in conquering England, and the British influence in the New World was greatly reduced. And this very different North America has some very different dangers.
EKBLAW, ROBERT
Counter the Koman (American Literary, 1998.)
A handful of humans are carried off into interstellar space where they are instrumental in settling a dangerous conflict.
EKLUND, GORDON (See collaborations with Poul Anderson and with Gregory Benford.)
Alien Realms (Star, 1980.)
Tedric #4.
Not seen.
All Times Possible (DAW, 1974.)
Intriguing story of a man who set out to alter history by keeping the US out of the second World War, and then discovered that he had to make other changes constantly to prevent an even less pleasant future than the original one.
Black Knight of the Iron Sphere (Baronet, 1979, Star, 1979, Ace, 1981.)
Tedric #3.
Tedric is declared a traitor as part of a ruse in order to infiltrate a criminal organization pretending to be a legitimate rebel alliance against a corrupt and faltering empire.
Dance of the Apocalypse (Laser, 1976.)
A standard story of the survivors of a nuclear war rebuilding civilization from within the shattered cities of North America.
Devil World (Bantam, 1979, Corgi, 1985.)
A Star Trek novel.
The Enterprise visits an enigmatic planet whose inhabitants seem to have almost supernatural powers, the greatest of which is a disembodied alien intelligence who may be the most powerful being in the universe.
Eclipse of Dawn (Ace, 1971.)
The US has been ravaged by a new civil war that left Washington in ruins and the nation crippled by a foreign embargo. A Presidential candidate announces that he will restore the country with the assistance of the super science provided by an alien race from Jupiter.
Falling Toward Forever (Laser, 1975.)
A professional soldier becomes the plaything of a mysterious force that keeps moving him forward through time to one crisis after another.
Garden of Winter, The (Berkley, 1980.)
Odd novel about the power of love surviving in a world that has descended into chaos.
Grayspace Beast, The (Doubleday, 1976, Pocket, 1977.)
A band of adventurers sets out to destroy a gigantic beast that exists in space, in an anomaly similar to a pocket universe.
Lord Tedric (Ace, 1978, Baronet, 1978.)
Tedric #1.
A hero is pulled from an alternate universe where magic works into that of a galactic empire threatened by invasion by an alien race.
Serving in Time (Laser, 1975.)
In the year 2500 a man joins the government time service, but soon conceives an agenda of his own. If a few critical events in history were to be changed, perhaps the result would be the perfect world he envisions. But as one might expect, things don’t go the way he intended.
Space Pirates (Baronet, 1979, Wingate, 1979, Ace, 1980.)
Tedric #2.
Tedric is now leading a band of outlaws, pirates, and other outcasts in an open though limited revolt against the family that has assumed control of the Terran Empire.
Starless World, The (Bantam, 1978, Corgi, 1985.)
A Star Trek novel.
The Enterprise encounters an artificial world with its own internal sun, but doomed by its proximity to black hole unless Kirk and crew can find a way to save a world. At the same time, they must deal with a possibly supernatural entity and a crew of Klingon political refugees.
Thunder on Neptune, A (Morrow, 1989.)
A young boy with a badly disabled body is recruited into a scientific mission to use a matter transmitter to transform his body into one capable of living on the surface of the planet Neptune.
Trace of Dreams, A (Ace, 1972.)
On a remote world, a rebel band makes periodic forays from their mountain strongholds, while the media treats the entire conflict as a sporting event.
Twilight River, The (Dell, 1979, bound with The Tery by F. Paul Wilson.)
Short novel about a far future Earth where werewolves, vampires, and magicians are all effectively real thanks to advanced science.
ELAM, RICHARD
Science Fiction Stories (Pocket, 1964. Lantern Press, 1952, as Teen-Age Science Fiction Stories.)
Collection of unrelated stories.
Super Science Stories (Pocket, 1967. Lantern Press, 1957, as Teen-Age Super Science Stories)
Collection of unrelated stories.
Teen-Age Science Fiction Stories. (See Science Fiction Stories.)
Teen-Age Super Science Stories. (See Super Science Stories.)
Young Readers Science Fiction Stories (Grosset & Dunlap, ?, Lantern, 1957.)
Collection of unrelated stories.
Young Stowaways in Space (Lantern, 1960.)
Not seen.
Young Visitor to Mars (Lantern, 1953.)
Two youngsters visit the moon and Mars and have various adventures.