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S. B. Hough (1917–1988)

Author of First on Mars

14 Works 383 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Also includes: Rex Gordon (1)

Works by S. B. Hough

First on Mars (1957) 95 copies, 1 review
First Through Time (2016) 72 copies, 1 review
Utopia Minus X (1966) 56 copies
First to the Stars (1959) 56 copies
The Yellow Fraction (1969) 45 copies, 1 review
Sweet Sister Seduced (1968) 14 copies
Fear Fortune, Father (1976) 12 copies
Utopia 239 (1961) 9 copies
Dear Daughter Dead (1983) 7 copies
The Tender Killer (1962) 7 copies
Mission in Guemo (1953) 3 copies
Extinction bomber (1956) 2 copies

Tagged

Ace (7) Ace D (2) aliens (3) crime fiction (2) CRWR3 (4) cusfs (3) English (3) fiction (19) Freas cover (2) G (3) Gunn Center - Books (5) home (2) loc:ns228 (4) Mars (4) mmpb (4) mysteries (2) mystery (14) novel (17) paperback (7) PB (4) science fiction (93) Science Fiction/Fantasy (5) sf (36) sff (6) time travel (2) to-read (4) unread (4) Urania (3) vintage paperback (7) XX  (2)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Hough, Stanley Bennett
Other names
Gordon, Rex (pseudonym)
Stanley, Bennett
Birthdate
1917-02-25
Date of death
1988-02
Gender
male
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Preston, Lancashire, England, UK
Place of death
Falmouth, Cornwall, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
This started off quite strongly by posing conundra about the nature of time and whether the future can be altered. The main part was quite interesting and reminiscent of Wyndham's The Chrysalids - as was the book overall with its emphasis on ideas rather than characters or plot drive. However, I felt it tailed off at the end when the narrator returned to the present time.
½
Also known as "No Man Friday", this gem of a novel might well be titled "Robinson Crusoe on Mars" - although it is not connected with the 1964 film of that title.
One man survives the crash of the first spaceship to land on Mars and a second expedition is unlikely for many years. So the lone survivor is forced to make do with his very limited resources and to learn how to make use of what Mars provides for him - this version of Mars has a thin but almost breathable atmosphere as well as show more sparse plants and animals. show less
There are three colonization groups on planet Acorn. The "Blues" want to breed people to suit the planet, the "Greens" who favour severe Terraforming instead, and the "Yellows", not so highly thought of, who just want to use the place as a stepping stone to further exploration, in the hopes of getting a better planet.

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Associated Authors

Kelly Freas Cover artist
Bruce Roberts Cover artist
John Richards Cover artist
Alan Brien Introduction
Joe Petagno Cover artist
Jack Gaughan Illustrator
Horst Mayer Translator
Johnny Bruck Cover artist

Statistics

Works
14
Members
383
Popularity
#63,100
Rating
3.2
Reviews
3
ISBNs
22
Languages
3

Charts & Graphs