Total Pulp Experience. These exciting pulp adventures have been beautifully reformatted for easy reading as an eBook and features every story, every editorial, and every column of the original pulp magazine.
During the science-fiction boom of the 1930s, there were over a dozen pulp magazines dedicated to the subject. Analog, Startling Stories, Amazing Stories, Wonder Stories, Captain Future and Super Science Stories were just a few. In 1939, the pulp magazine publisher of Jungle Stories, and many others, added its own entry into the sci-fi field, Planet Stories. Until it folded in 1955, it published ground-breaking science fiction from some of the genre's brightest stars, including such luminaries as Ray Cummings, Frederic Arnold Kummer, Jr., Eando Binder, Leight Bracket, Isaac Asimov, Clifford D. Simak, Henry Kuttner, Ray Bradbury, Frederik Pohl, James Blish, A.E. van Vogt, Theodore Sturgeon, Alan E. Nourse and Robert Sheckley. Planet Stories returns in these vintage pulp tales, reissued for today’s readers in electronic format.
Table of Contents:
Two Thrilling Novels
Eternal Zemmd Must Die!
by Henry Hasse
Lancing out of the void at light speed, it stabbed deep into the Solar System — and vanished. Then began corruption... poison and hate creeping from world to world. Too late men learned a death blow had been delivered!
Hostage Of Tomorrow
by Robert Abernathy
Was Earth on the wrong time-track? Ray Manning stared as nation smashed nation and humans ran in yelping, slavering packs under a sky pulsing with evil energy — and knew the answer lay a hundred years back. Could he return?
Six Fascinating Stories
Runaway
by Alfred Coppel, Jr.
Ripped by an asteroid stray, the space-ship drifted helplessly... until suddenly, across the shuddering deeps, a strange voice called to her.
Moon Of Madness
by George Whitley
Hurtling toward that coldly gleaming disc, they thought in terms of thrust and trajectory, deceleration and orbit. They had no time for an old wives’ tale.
Dwellers In Silence
by Ray Bradbury
A shattered Earth suddenly remembered poor Hathaway, marooned all alone there on Mars by the mad rush homeward. But — was Hathaway alone?
The Star Beast
by Damon Knight
They called this strange tentacle-headed-blob that had floundered into the System Oscar. They were to learn a better name.
Lady Into Hell-Cat
by Stanley Mullen
Tracking her across black space-lanes and slapping magnetic bracelets on her was duck soup for S.P. Agent Heydrick. Only then did he learn what a planet-load of trouble he’d bought.
Animat
by Basil Wells
Battling Venus’ slime and the vicious frog-apes, J46 yet found time to wonder: Was he a man or an android?
And Planet’s Regular Feature
The Vizigraph
by The Readers