By Eric Frank Russell; John W. Campbell; Thomas M Disch; John Sladek; Keith Roberts; Robin Cook; Howard Berk; Philip Jose Farmer; Roberto Vacca; Geoffrey Ashe; J. O. Jeppson; Charles Logan; Chris Boyce
London   Panther Books
7" by 4.5" 144; 218; 188; 221; 175; 253; 239; 207; 176; 264; 252; 204; 187; 254pp.
A collection of fourteen science fiction novels published by Panther Books.
By Eric Frank Russell; John W. Campbell; Thomas M Disch; John Sladek; Keith Roberts; Robin Cook; Howard Berk; Philip Jose Farmer; Roberto Vacca; Geoffrey Ashe; J. O. Jeppson; Charles Logan; Chris Boyce

1964-1977 A Collection of Science Fiction Novels from Panther Books

London   Panther Books
7" by 4.5" 144; 218; 188; 221; 175; 253; 239; 207; 176; 264; 252; 204; 187; 254pp.
A collection of fourteen science fiction novels published by Panther Books.
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: 3kgs / : 849T31

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Description

Original Binding, Publishers' Original Binding

Fourteen volumes. The Great Explosion by Eric Frank Russell, 1964. The Blieder drive, a faster-than-light drive system, has permitted the population of Earth to colonize the galaxy. With each planet becoming home for a particular social group. Written by Eric Frank Russell, a British writer of science fiction and short stories. Analogue Two by John W. Campbell, 1967. A collection of short science fiction stories. Edited by John W. Campbell, an American science fiction writer and editor credited as a major part of the Golden Age of Science Fiction. The Genocides by Thomas M. Disch, 1968. A novel describing the genocide of humanity by aliens who wish to seed Earth with enormous plants. Written by Thomas M. Disch, an American science fiction writer and poet. The Müller-Fokker Effect by John Sladek, 1972. A satirical science fiction novel set "somewhere in the near future", where Bob Shairp is a government worker for a project in which a human being's individual qualities can be stored as computer data - on Müller-Fokker tapes. Written by John Sladek, an American science fiction author known for surrealism. The Inner Wheel by Keith Roberts, 1972. The Groups developed gestalt brains, became bands of the physically gifted who could see into the future, into men's minds and even move objects without touching them. Caused by a breakthrough or a mutation, they taught themselves to cope with fear. Written by Keith Roberts, an English science fiction author. A State of Denmark by Robin Cook, 1973. England is ruled by Jobling, a dictator with an efficient secret police and a long memory. Richard Watt used all his journalistic talents to expose Jobling before he came to power. Now, in exile in Italy, Watt cultivates his vineyards. Written by Robin Cook, an English science fiction author. The Sun Grows Cold by Howard Berk, 1974. The time: The near future. The place: America. Across the devastated landscape of what once was the richest country on earth, a man and woman are running for their lives. Written by Howard Berk, an American novelist, screenwriter, and producer. To Your Scattered Bodies Go by Philip José Farmer, 1974. The first of the Riverworld series, British adventurer Richard Francis Burton dies on Earth and is revived in mid-air in a vast dark room filled with human bodies, some only half-formed. Written by Philip José Farmer, an American author known for his science fiction and fantasy novels and short stories. The Coming Dark Age by Roberto Vacca, 1974. Written by Roberto Vacca, an Italian engineer, mathematician, scientist and writer. The Finger and the Moon by Geoffrey Ashe, 1975. Written by Geoffrey Ashe, a British cultural historian and lecturer, known for his focus on King Arthur. The Fabulous Riverboat by Philip José Farmer, 1975. The second work in the Riverworld series, the novel follows the efforts of Samuel Clemens to find a way to build a riverboat on the metal-poor Riverworld. Also written by Philip José Farmer. The Second Experiment by J. O. Jeppson, 1975. She was the last of the dynasty. With her faithful robot Tec, she took the last ship to a star with nine planets, the third of which had life. Then she decided it was time to find a mate. Written by Janet Opal Asimov, or J. O. Jeppson, an American science fiction writer, psychiatrist, and psychoanalyst. Shipwreck by Charles Logan, 1977. When an atomic explosion destroys a huge expedition ship, Tansis becomes the sole survivor. Written by Charles Logan, a British science fiction writer and professional nurse. Catchworld by Chris Boyce, 1977. Written by Chris Boyce, a Scottish science fiction author.

Condition

In the original pictorial paper binding. Externally, very smart with light shelf wear to the extremities. Internally, firmly bound. Pages are very bright and clean with the odd handling mark.

Very Good

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