
Science Fiction Terminology From the Pulps
If you missed the last one… This post is brought to you by Ships of Steel edited by G. W. Thomas. This anthology of Space Read More
If you missed the last one… This post is brought to you by Ships of Steel edited by G. W. Thomas. This anthology of Space Read More
If you missed the last one… This post is brought to you by Ships of Steel, an anthology of space adventure in the Swords of Read More
If you missed the last one… This post is brought to you by The Cryo Game and Other Stories, the latest short story collection from Read More
H. G. Wells changed Science Fiction forever when he gave readers the first invasion of Earth by an alien race. (Along with this idea, he Read More
If you missed the last one… Our Strange Adventures series continues with Edmond Hamilton’s good buddy, Jack Williamson. Jack would pen several fantastic adventure novels, Read More
The Pulp era played with many older ideas from Science Fiction’s earliest days. The concept of shrinking so small to pass into other worlds was Read More
Miles J. Breuer, M. D. (1889-1945) was an early Science Fiction writer as well as a doctor from Lincoln, Nebraska. He was a acolyte of Read More
Jack Williamson might be the longest working Pulp SF writer in history, writing from 1928 (“The Metal Man”, Amazing Stories, December 1928) to The Stonehenge Read More
This post is brought to you by Bearshirt #2 The Hidden World by G. W. Thomas. The second novel in the series takes place in Read More
Atlantis flourished during The Pulp Years, 1923-1954. In L. Sprague de Camp’s Lost Continents (1954) he discusses the romantic novels of the 1880-90s, then follows Read More