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Roger Elwood (1943–2007)

Author of Angelwalk

168+ Works 4,540 Members 45 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Roger Elwood

Angelwalk (1988) 228 copies, 1 review
Epoch (1975) — Editor — 224 copies, 2 reviews
The Book of Poul Anderson (1974) — Editor — 162 copies
Continuum 1 (1974) — Editor — 128 copies, 1 review
Continuum 2 (1974) — Editor — 113 copies, 1 review
Continuum 3 (1974) — Editor — 113 copies, 2 reviews
Fallen Angel / Steadfast (1990) 109 copies
The Road to Masada (1994) 99 copies
Future City (1973) — Editor — 96 copies, 1 review
A World Named Cleopatra (1977) — Editor — 91 copies
Fallen Angel (1991) 86 copies, 1 review
Continuum 4 (1975) — Editor — 85 copies, 2 reviews
Omega (1973) — Editor — 68 copies, 1 review
Other Worlds, Other Times (1969) — Editor — 67 copies, 3 reviews
The Wounded Planet (1973) — Editor — 64 copies
Six Science Fiction Plays (Pocket Books Sci-Fi No. 48766) (1975) — Editor — 61 copies, 2 reviews
Ten Tomorrows (1972) — Editor — 59 copies
Keeper (1976) — Editor — 55 copies
Birthright (1975) — Editor — 55 copies
Stedfast: Guardian Angel (1992) 54 copies
The Other Side of Tomorrow (1973) — Editor — 52 copies, 3 reviews
Falling Toward Forever (2017) — Editor — 52 copies, 1 review
Wise One (1991) 52 copies
Alien Earth and Other Stories (1969) — Editor — 51 copies, 1 review
Dwellers (1990) 49 copies, 1 review
The Black Roads (1976) — Editor — 49 copies
The Venus Factor (1972) — Editor — 48 copies
Children of Infinity (1973) — Editor — 47 copies, 2 reviews
Jeremy Case (1976) — Editor — 46 copies
Strange Gods (1974) — Editor — 45 copies, 1 review
The Horde (1976) — Editor — 42 copies, 1 review
The Wandering (1990) 41 copies
Future Quest (1973) — Editor — 40 copies
Invasion of the Robots (1965) — Editor — 39 copies, 1 review
Science Fiction Tales: Invaders, Creatures and Alien Worlds (1973) — Editor — 39 copies, 1 review
Visions of Tomorrow: An Interstellar Collection (1976) — Editor — 37 copies
Alien Worlds (1964) — Editor — 37 copies
The Christening (1989) 36 copies
Tomorrow's Alternatives (Anthology 12-in-1) (1973) — Editor — 35 copies, 1 review
Science Fiction Adventure from Way Out (1973) — Editor — 32 copies
Berserkers (1974) — Editor — 32 copies, 1 review
Horror Hunters (1975) — Editor — 31 copies, 1 review
Children of the Furor (1990) 26 copies
Stephen the Martyr: A Novel (1998) 25 copies, 1 review
Future Corruption (Anthology 12-in-1) (1975) — Editor & Contributor — 25 copies
The New Mind (Anthology 9-in-1) (1973) — Editor — 25 copies
Circle of Deception (1993) 23 copies
Young Demons (1971) — Editor — 21 copies
The Time Curve (1968) — Editor — 20 copies
Demon Kind (11-in-1) (1973) — Editor — 20 copies
Dystopian Visions (1975) — Editor — 19 copies
The Human Zero (1967) — Editor — 18 copies
Sorcerers of Sodom (1991) 17 copies, 1 review
Beware the Beasts (1970) — Editor — 17 copies, 1 review
My Faith (1975) — Editor — 16 copies
Riversong (1998) 16 copies
To God Be The Glory (1977) 15 copies
Monster Tales: Vampires, Werewolves, & Things (1973) — Editor — 14 copies
Dark Knight (1991) 14 copies
Angelwalk [and] Stedfast (2005) 13 copies
The Fifty-Meter Monsters & Other Horrors (1976) — Editor — 13 copies
Showcase (1973) — Editor — 12 copies
Crisis: ten original stories of science fiction (1974) — Editor — 11 copies
Beware More Beasts (1976) — Editor — 10 copies
In the Wake of Man (1975) — Editor — 9 copies, 1 review
Prince of Darkness (1974) 8 copies
Promises (1997) 7 copies
Long Night of Waiting and Other Stories (1974) — Editor — 7 copies
Tomorrow: New Worlds of Science Fiction (1975) — Editor — 7 copies
Future Kin (Anthology 8-in-1) (1974) — Editor — 6 copies
The Tunnel : and other stories (1974) — Editor — 5 copies
Wendy's Phoenix (1999) 5 copies
The Little Monsters (1969) — Editor — 4 copies
Signs and Wonders (1972) 4 copies, 1 review
Joanie Loves Chachi (1982) 3 copies
Salvation Behind Bars (1977) 3 copies
Strange Signposts (Anthology 15-in-1) (1966) — Editor — 3 copies
Starstream #1 (1976) 2 copies
Shawn Hawk 2 copies, 1 review
Fantasy Island (1981) 2 copies
Survival from Infinity (1974) 2 copies
Angel Errante (1989) 1 copy
Golden paths (1978) 1 copy
Tomorrow 1 copy
Blessed by God (1979) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Many Worlds of Andre Norton (1974) — Editor — 274 copies, 2 reviews
The Space Beyond (1976) — Editor — 71 copies
New Dimensions IV (1974) — Author — 58 copies
The Many Worlds of Barry Malzberg (1975) — Preface — 37 copies

Tagged

Adult Fiction (20) angels (21) anthologies (17) anthology (369) Christian (44) Christian fiction (82) collection (20) dean koontz (16) fantasy (51) fiction (365) hardcover (21) horror (34) juvenile fiction (14) L-SF-anth (15) Laser Books (42) mmpb (16) mystery (14) novel (14) paperback (49) PB (23) science fiction (584) series (25) sf (249) sff (38) ShelvedLib (19) short fiction (19) short stories (168) stories (14) to-read (40) unread (30)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Elwood, Roger Paul
Birthdate
1943-01-13
Date of death
2007-02-02
Gender
male
Occupations
science fiction writer
editor
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA
Place of death
Norfolk City, Virginia, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Discussions

Reviews

51 reviews
The publisher’s blurb claims that this novel “graphically portrays how Satanism has infiltrated our culture through music, medicine, education, the media, and in many more subtle ways.” While the story clearly contains no objective facts regarding the Satanic conspiracy it alleges to dramatize, it does form an interesting case study in psychosocial projection. The Satanists are portrayed as focusing their efforts on raising a generation of indoctrinated drones, recruiting them from
show more children whom their parents wanted to abort,
• Satanically-dominated day care centers, and
• Satanic infiltration of public schools.

I have yet to see any evidence of Satanism on those three fronts, but it does not escape my notice that evangelical Christians are perennially interested in those venues for the indoctrination of children with the worship of their Jehovah-Jesus caricatures.

Similarly, the Satanically-inspired New Age movement is supposed to be based on promises of “rebirth without a great deal of anxiety”—which is exactly how the individuals “saved” in the novel experience their conversions to Christianity. Oh, there’s anxiety about the Satanic hordes of course, but not about Jesus! Just desperate contempt transformed to insipid reverence.

Temple of Set founder Michael Aquino is an offstage presence in the narrative, invoked as “Martin Andreno…the top Satanist in the nation.” And the author, writing in 1991 e.v., assures the reader through the voice of a repentant New Age guru, “By the year 2000, they will have everyone who hasn’t become a Satanist living in moment-by-moment fear of their lives.”

Predictably, the Christian heroes of the text are given plenty of opportunity to express their abhorrence of sex, drugs, and rock’n’roll. In an unexpected piece of dialogue, the protagonist and an arch-Satanist discuss atheism, with the pastor-hero defending the moral sensibility of atheists, and the Satanist deriding them for “having no belief at all.” Author Elwood seems to have misplaced his Christian evangelical script, in which atheists are tools of Satan.

Bewildering indeed is the novel’s climax, in which a Native American, recently converted to Christianity and armed with a bow and arrow(!), serves as emergency reinforcements for the hero, in a pyrrhic attempt to rescue the Indian’s own son from crucifixion by Satanists.

Observing the commercial success of the Left Behind novels, I can only hope that the last two decades have seen improvements in the standard for pop-Christian evangelical paranoid fantasy stories.
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Nice little collection of eight stories by some of the early-to-mid-20th century's greatest horror authors. "Ancient Sorceries," about a man who recounts his strange experience in a remote French village where the peasants seem to turn themselves into cats, is--in my opinion--the best and most atmospheric of Algernon Blackwood's longer pieces. H.P. Lovecraft hadn't yet hit his stride when he wrote "The Unnamable," but it's one of the first tales in which he grappled with the concept of show more cosmic horror, and made plain his ambition to produce something more than a standard haunted house story. August Derleth had his moments (see "The Thing That Walked on the Wind" and "Alannah"), but "Mr. Ames' Devil" isn't one of them; it's the sort of throwaway comedy-horror fluff that inspired Jack Laird's silly "blackout" sketches on Night Gallery and not much else. The book closes with a bang, however: "I Kiss Your Shadow" is one of the finest pulp horror tales that Robert Bloch ever wrote. He was a born yarn-spinner, and this story of a femme fatale who becomes even more implacable in death shows Bloch at the top of his game.

Good stuff from William Hope Hodgson, Theodore Sturgeon and Fritz Leiber, too. (Plus an okay story by Robert E. Howard.) Horror Hunters is worth picking up if you can find a reasonably priced copy.
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Children of Infinity wasn't the first collection of science fiction stories that I ever read. It is, however, the first collection of science fiction stories that I read that I still own. In fact, the copy that I own is the same one given to me by my parents when I was still in elementary school. In many ways, the stories found in this volume are the metrics that first defined for me what the words "science fiction" meant, and luckily for me, the diverse range and high quality of the stories show more that represents gave me a fairly good appreciation for what the genre could be.

In Time Brother, Raymond F. Jones uses losing one's parents - one of the most common childhood fears - as the backdrop for his story. Seventeen year old Ben is at the funeral for his parents when the ceremony is disrupted by a scrawny young boy named David who claims that the deceased are in fact his parents, which seems ludicrous as Ben knows he is an only child. Ben takes a liking to the obviously underfed, possibly homeless, and presumed mentally ill boy, and takes him home to take care of him until his true family can be found. From there the story has a major twist that is mostly given away by the title as it turns out that David is Ben's brother, just displaced in time by a thousand years. There is the comforting message passed along to Ben that his parents' death has meaning and he has a destiny, and then the story comes to a close. This is not one of the stronger stories in the volume, but it is relatively straightforward, so one can see why the editor chose to open the book with it.

Wingless on Avalon by Poul Anderson is probably the most "standard" science fiction story in the volume. Set on the distant planet Avalon where humanity and the alien Yrthians have established what is intended to be a joint colony, the story focuses on Nat Falkayn, a twelve year old boy trying to fit in with the adolescent Ythrians around him. The Ythrians are an avian race, clumsy on the ground but at home and agile in the air, which makes Nat incredibly jealous to to his own earthbound state. He sets out on a sailing adventure with a pair of adolescent Ythrians, one of whom is almost openly contemptuous of Nat and his inability to fly. The trio sets out to test the Ythrians' new sailing boat, which seems like an odd hobby for creature who can fly to be enthusiastic about, but it gives Nat the opportunity to be a hero and earn some respect from his colleagues and an appreciation for the things humans can do that Ythrians cannot. I'm not sure if I entirely agree that the nature of the "compensation" Anderson posits really offsets the inability to fly, the implausibility of having flying creatures incapable of swimming be avid sailors makes the plot seem like little more than an artifice created for a teaching moment, and the opening of the story is nothing more than a naked information dump, but it is a fairly optimistic adventure story, which sets it apart from many of the other offerings in this collection.

The Tower by Thomas N. Scortia tells the story of an unnamed young mutant living on a post-apocalyptic Earth. Kept in isolation within his family's tower for his own protection from the other survivors who, we are told, kill mutants on sight. With his mother dead and his father ill and dying, the protagonist tries to seek out a doctor but is spotted by some children. Soon a mob forms, surrounding the tower in manner reminiscent of the old black and white movie version of Frankenstein, and the protagonist must do something he has never done before to escape. The Tower is a relatively simple story that leads to a fairly open ended finish, but it captures the emotions of being a teenager - alienation, isolation, but also the sense of being unique and special, and this emotional content is what makes the story work. The Tower is probably the weakest story in the volume, and probably would have been much improved if the story had been lengthened, allowing for more character development.

Given Robert Bloch's reputation as a writer, one would expect him to contribute a creepy and disturbing story to this collection despite the fact that Children of Infinity is aimed at younger readers, and Space-Born does not disappoint in this regard. In the story, an expedition sent to find a stolen space craft locates the derelict on a distant planet but finds the thieving astronaut and his wife have both died from starvation. They do, however, find a baby that they dub "Keva" after her father, who they take back to Earth. As one might expect for a child found in a shadowy cave on an alien planet, Keva turns out to be a bright but somewhat odd child - and odd in a decidedly creepy way. Events turn both stranger and eerier as the story progresses until Keva's true nature is revealed, turning the story into a race to save humanity. The story ends on a fairly frightening note, almost reminiscent of an episode of the Twilight Zone, providing an interesting contrast to much of young adult fiction, including some of the more upbeat stories found in this collection such as Wingless in Avalon.

Even darker than Space Born, Opening the Door by Philip José Farmer presents the bleakest vision of all the stories in the collection. The story starts with the viewpoint character, a teenager named Clark, struggling to surface in a dark well that is not entirely metaphorical, only to discover when he reaches consciousness that he is all but dead and has only been preserved through the use of experimental medical procedures that have left him without a body and entirely dependent upon machines to communicate. From this starting point, the story only gets darker and more unsettling, which is a fairly impressive feat. Clark, we are told, has been drafted into an experiment seeking contact with parallel universes, and his near dead state has made him uniquely capable of reaching out to them. Using an essentially helpless protagonist might seem like an unusual choice, but by doing so, Farmer is able to capture the powerlessness felt by so many teenagers, as parents who are seemingly absent when he needs them most make all of the decisions for Clark without his input. And it is this helplessness that makes the ending, in which developments take a turn for the macabre, work so well. On the one hand, Clark is a victim - a horrified bystander who can only be a witness to the unfolding events, but on the other hand, Clark is the agent through which the horror works, in a sense the metaphorical expression of his adolescent rage. Farmer has captured both the fear and fury of being a teenager in a brilliantly crafted story.

In the early 1970s, environmentalism was moving to the forefront of the cultural discussion, and All You Can Eat by Harvey L. Bilker and Audrey L. Bilker uses a rather humorous tale to offer some modest commentary on the issue. In the story the unnamed protagonist selects a rather nice New York restaurant that offers an "all you can eat" special and then proceeds to eat everything on the menu and then some. As an aside, it is an indicator of the age of the story that the "all you can eat" option only costs $4.95 for a menu that is said to include (among other things) lobster, shrimp, escargot, frog's legs, escargot, and orange duck. As the story progresses the alien continues to eat prodigious amounts of food, to the dismay of the establishment's other customers and eventually the restaurant owner himself. Eventually the alien reveals that he hails from a distant planet that has been wrecked by pollution, and now its inhabitants have to send agents across the galaxy to consume and "kinergize" food back to their starving population. The alien then delivers the somewhat chilling message that consuming an entire planet's resources may be inevitable, and it is only a matter of time before Earth finds itself in the same situation. This harsh message is wrapped in such a humorous that it almost sneaks up on the reader, despite the bluntness with which it is delivered.

Another story that uses environmentalism as an underlying theme, Terrafied by Arthur Tofte also mixes in the issue of colonialism to create a story that is almost didactic but still manages to pack a solid punch. I believe that this may be the most famous story in the collection: I don't remember if I first encountered this story in this collection or in one of my elementary school textbooks, but I do remember seeing it as a reading selection in one of my school texts. No matter where I first read it, the story follows Dor, a teenage inhabitant of the planet Tyrox who is kidnapped by human explorers and brought back to Earth. Once there, Dor is exposed to Earth culture, allowing Tofte to illustrate all of the ugly elements of humanity - mostly focusing on our propensity for war and casual violence, but also touching on the rapacious and destructive nature humans display that leads to poverty and despair. Using an alien as the viewpoint character allows Tofte to make even a game of football or a drive along an abandoned highway seem frightening. The real thrust of the story is that the overburdened Earth is slowly dying under the weight of its massive human population with its ecology wrecked beyond repair, and in the tradition of Imperialist colonizers throughout history humanity proposes to settle hundreds of millions of humans onto Tyrox without even asking the inhabitants their opinion on the matter. Dor ends up making a bold choice in defense of her home, but the story ends before the consequences are shown. Although the story is fairly heavy-handed with its points, it is brutally effective.

Lest anyone think that dystopian fiction aimed at younger readers is a new trend, the first of the three dystopian stories in the book is Conversations at Lothar's by Barry N. Malzberg. The story is a relatively bare-bones affair, with the protagonist starting the story by having the titular conversation in which Lothar talks about the days before everyone lived in the gigantic, miles tall Domicile with details of their lives controlled by the Bureau. When she returns to her own quarters, the protagonist is confronted by Del, one of the others living in her assigned quarters, and who, we are told, she will be assigned to as a mate in a few years. During this conversation the protagonist realizes that she doesn't want to be Del's assigned mate, and truly begins to rebel in her mind. By the end, we see that the tiny spark provided by Lothar has turned into a modest flame. The beauty of this story is in how much is conveyed in so few words - there is only a brief description of the Domicile, but Malzberg gives a clear picture of its immense size and state of disrepair. Though the level of exacting control the Bureau has over the lives of the Domicile's denizens is not spelled out in full, enough is given that it is readily apparent to the reader. Conversations at Lothar's is almost a master lesson in how to tell the most story using the least number of words.

Another well-crafted dystopian tale, Half Life by Rachel Cosgrove Payes seems to draw inspiration directly from the 1967 novel Logan's Run, as it posits a society in which everyone lives to at most thirty years old before they "expire", with the exact dates kept track of via tattoos imprinted on the back of every citizen's hand. But in a cruel twist, instead of the government hunting down those who have lived past their termination date, all citizens must locate an expired before they turn fifteen, kill their target, and return the hand with the expired date upon it. If one fails to accomplish this, then one expires at the age of fifteen instead of thirty. Benji is nearing his fifteenth birthday, and is growing desperate to find an expired he can claim. Without parents, he has to locate an unclaimed expired adult to kill, and those are few and far between in the city. This fact - that finding an expired is especially difficult for Benji due to his lack of parents - is the sort of atmospheric world-building that sets this story well above the ordinary. While a culture in which teenagers must hunt down and kill those who have gotten too "old" to be allowed to live, the implication in this one line is that a child would normally murder one of their own parents to satisfy their obligation. This, more than anything else in Half-Life expresses the truly barbaric nature of the dystopian future Payes has imagined. Benji's quest takes him outside the city on a wild goose chase for the legendary "old man of the hills", and winds up taking him someplace he never expected to go, but for the reader is somewhat predictable. Like Conversations at Lothar's, this story ends on a note of rebellion, but the rebellion is more concrete, and it has a decidedly musical nature.

Of all the stories in this anthology, Wake Up to Thunder by Dean R. Koontz is the one that made the most impression upon me when I first read it as a child. The story is told from the perspective of one of the nameless children of "Thunder", the loving all-powerful mind that takes care of humanity as it sleeps and dreams in its tiny individual cells. The narrator has been awoken by Thunder to hunt down a renegade - a human who has awakened without permission and is doing damage to the vast complex that houses Thunder and all of the humans it loves. As the cadre of wakened hunters spreads throughout the complex, the narrator tells of his love for Thunder, and trust in the guardian and caretaker that manages his life, but becomes disturbed as he descends to the lowest levels of the complex and finds neglect and decay, and eventually, the renegade. And then the truth is revealed, and it turns out that Thunder is not what the protagonist thought it was. Wake Up to Thunder is a dystopian tale, probably more frightening than the others presented in this collection due to its plausibility, but it is a stealthy one, in which the actual horror of the dystopia sneaks up on the reader and isn't truly revealed until the very end. This is the most unsettling piece of fiction in Children of Infinity, and also the best.

With stories ranging from dark dystopian tales, to science fiction horror, to time travel, to cautionary admonishments against destroying the environment, to yarns of pure adventure and unexpected heroism, this is a strong collection that is sure to fascinate a young reader. Every story in this volume is strong, and several are outstanding. The stories have even managed to age well, and are not noticeably dated even though the anthology was originally published in 1973. In my life I have read numerous collections of science fiction aimed at young readers, but I have never encountered one that is as diverse or of as high a quality as this one.

This review has also been posted to my blog Dreaming About Other Worlds.
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Sometimes you just need one from the pulp paperback shelf, especially when there are a couple of long plane rides in the offing, and so it was with my decision to take this fun science fiction novel along on my recent vacation. Falling Toward Forever was published in 1975. Two soldiers are fighting on the same side in an anti-colonial war in an unnamed African country. One, Ahmad, is a black man fighting to free his own country. Waller is a white mercenary, a former Vietnam War prisoner of show more war and torture victim. Embittered by the experience and the hypocrisy of the U.S. government, he was turned soldier for hire, willing, so he says, to fight for any insurgency against any established government. Although Ahmad is suspicious of Waller's motives and what he believes to be Waller's death wish, the two have respect for each other as fighters. In the heat of a battle, Waller comes upon a woman who is trying to hide from the fighting. But she has a gun that she fires at Waller, hitting his arm. Just as he is about to return fire, Ahmad runs up from behind and yells at Waller not to shoot. Suddenly, all three of them are snatched from the spot by an unseen force and dropped down in a wholly alien environment. Where are they and what has happened to them? The rest of the novel, of course, brings us the trio trying to sort out their circumstances and deal with the people whose time and place they have suddenly entered.

Eklund seemed to be attempting to add at least a touch of social awareness to his story. It's hard to miss the fact that our trio of heroes include a white man, a black man and a woman. The leadership and planning, and the best ideas and plans, ebb and flow between all three characters throughout the story. On the other hand, the leadership often does default to Waller, and we are expected, it seems, to see this as natural. Well, I don't want to make too much of all that. This is, after all, a pulp novel, and it appears Eklund was at least aware of these issues in his storytelling. At any rate, Eklund's writing is pretty good, here, in terms of physical detail and even, to a certain extent, characterization. The plot itself gets more implausible as things go along, and the ending is rushed, but what the heck, I had fun reading the tale, which was just right for vacation reading.
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Awards

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Associated Authors

Robert Silverberg Contributor, Editor
Virginia Kidd Contributor, Editor
Vic Ghidalia Editor, Co-editor
Barry N. Malzberg Contributor
R. A. Lafferty Contributor
Poul Anderson Contributor, Author
Anne McCaffrey Contributor
Andre Norton Contributor, Author
Gene Wolfe Contributor
Thomas N. Scortia Contributor
Chad Oliver Contributor
George Zebrowski Contributor, Introduction, Author
Robert Bloch Contributor, Author, Introduction
Clifford D. Simak Contributor, Foreword, Author
Jack Dann Contributor, Author, Introduction
Edgar Pangborn Contributor
Gail Kimberly Contributor
Raymond F. Jones Contributor
Joseph Green Contributor
Isaac Asimov Contributor, Author, Foreword
Joanna Russ Contributor
Gordon Eklund Contributor
Arthur Tofte Contributor
Pamela Sargent Contributor
K. M. O'Donnell Contributor
Frederik Pohl Contributor, Afterword, Introduction
Terry Carr Contributor
Dean Koontz Contributor
Ben Bova Contributor
Theodore Sturgeon Introduction, Contributor
Larry Niven Contributor
Arthur C. Clarke Contributor, Author
Edmond Hamilton Contributor, Author
Brian W. Aldiss Contributor
Ray Bradbury Contributor, Author
Kris Neville Contributor
Richard Posner Contributor
Eric Frank Russell Contributor
Philip K. Dick Contributor
Fritz Leiber Contributor
Frank Herbert Introduction, Contributor
A. E. van Vogt Contributor, Author
Jack Williamson Contributor
Lloyd Biggle Jr. Contributor
Barry N. Malzberg Contributor
Howard Goldsmith Contributor
Ted White Contributor
Katherine MacLean Contributor
Tom Disch Contributor
D. M. Price Contributor
Harlan Ellison Contributor
J. F. Bone Contributor
H. G. Wells Contributor
H. P. Lovecraft Contributor
William F. Nolan Contributor
August Derleth Contributor
Leigh Brackett Contributor, Cover artist
Mack Reynolds Contributor
Michael Bishop Contributor
Gregory Benford Contributor
Cory Panshin Contributor
Jr. Neal Barrett Contributor
Kate Wilhelm Contributor
Ward Moore Contributor
A. A. Attanasio Contributor
Ursula K. Le Guin Contributor
Alexei Panshin Contributor
Lou Fisher Contributor
Harry Harrison Contributor
Jack Vance Contributor
John Shirley Contributor
Wallace Macfarlane Contributor
Ray Russell Contributor
Andrew J. Offutt Contributor
Joan C. Holly Contributor
Michael Orgill Author, Contributor
James Blish Contributor
David Gerrold Contributor
Raylyn Moore Contributor
Lester del Rey Contributor
Rudyard Kipling Contributor
Jules Verne Contributor
Richard A. Lupoff Contributor
Algernon Blackwood Contributor
David H. Charney Contributor
Dennis O'Neil Contributor
C. L. Grant Contributor
J. Hunter Holly Contributor
Thomas Scortia Contributor
Dean Koontz Contributor
Edward D. Hoch Contributor
Gardner Dozois Contributor
Stephen Goldin Contributor
Kelly Freas Cover artist
Gene Wolfe Contributor
John Wyndham Contributor
Laurence Yep Contributor
Bill Pronzini Contributor
Cynthia Asquith Contributor
Jerry Sohl Contributor
Tom Godwin Contributor
Joe L. Hensley Contributor
Audrey Bilker Contributor
Harvey Bilker Contributor
B. J. Lytle Contributor
John Brunner Contributor
Charles Moll Cover artist
Henry Kuttner Contributor
Marsha Daly Introduction
Morio Kita Contributor
Valerie King Contributor
James Sutherland Contributor
Charles Eric Maine Contributor
Carolyn Gloeckner Contributor
Thomas Cogswell Contributor
Lil Neville Contributor
John Jakes Contributor
Colin Saxton Contributor
Gary Snyder Contributor
Tom Reamy Contributor
Paul Zindel Contributor
Edgar Allan Poe Contributor
Gardner R. Dozois Contributor
Herbert Danska Illustrator
Nic Andersson Contributor
Gertrude Atherton Contributor
C. L. Moore Contributor
Agatha Christie Contributor
Zenna Henderson Contributor
Judith Merril Contributor
Audrey Bilker Contributor
Harvey L. Bilker Contributor
John B. Thomas Contributor
James Howard Contributor
Terry Dixon Contributor
William K. Grasty Contributor
Richard Matheson Contributor
Tarleton Fiske Contributor
Tom Purdom Contributor
Nick Boles Contributor
Carol Carr Contributor
Nat Schachner Contributor
Robert Sheckley Contributor
C. F. Hensel Contributor
Lee Saye Contributor
James Sallis Contributor
Dan Spiegle Illustrator
Robin Schaeffer Contributor
Nancy Mackenroth Contributor
Kathleen Groenjes Illustrator
Adrian Cole Contributor
Daphne Castell Contributor
Fritz Jr. Leiber Contributor
Robert E. Howard Contributor
J. J. Russ Contributor
Gerard M. Bauer Contributor
Richard Lupoff Contributor
Saki Contributor
Lester Del Rey Contributor
Joe Hensley Contributor
L. Sprague de Camp Contributor
Norman Spinrad Contributor
Edward Bryant Contributor
A. E. Van Vogt Contributor
Eric Franc Russell Contributor
Edward Lucas White Contributor
Creye La Spina Contributor
Bram Stoker Contributor
Roger Lovin Contributor
Brian Ball Contributor
George H. Smith Contributor
Bruce McAllister Contributor
David Bischoff Contributor
Ambrose Bierce Contributor
Chris Lampton Contributor
L. Sprague de Camp Contributor
Joseph L. Green Contributor
Luis Senarens Contributor
Ralph Milne Farley Contributor
James H. Schmitz Contributor
Ward Smith Contributor
Carol Emshwiller Contributor
Joe Haldeman Contributor
Guy de Maupassant Contributor
Margaret St. Clair Contributor
William F. Temple Contributor
Matt Christopher Contributor
Ron Goulart Contributor
Eando Binder Contributor
Joseph Howell Contributor
Jeff Sutton Contributor
Doris Piserchia Contributor
Maureen Exter Contributor
Dan Quest Cover artist
John Keith Mason Contributor
Walter F. Moudy Contributor
Sonya Dorman Contributor
Greg Bear Contributor
Robert Hoskins Contributor
Neil Shapiro Contributor
Joan Hunter Holly Contributor
Alan E. Nourse Contributor
Miriam Bunch Contributor
Mary C. McKinley Contributor
Phyllis Eisenstein Contributor
Jack Dann Contributor
Bob Shaw Contributor
Christopher Anvil Contributor
H Vincent Contributor
Hamilton-E Contributor
L.P. Senarens Contributor
N. Hawthorne Contributor
M.W. shelley Contributor
E. A. Poe Contributor
J. Williamson Contributor
R. Bloch Contributor
Erckmann-Chatrian Contributor
E. R. Burroughs Contributor
A.C. Clarke Contributor
Vincent DiFate Cover artist, Cover Artist
Jack Faragasso Cover artist
Patrick Woodroffe Cover artist
Jack Gaughan Cover artist
Richard Powers Cover artist
Charles Geer Cover artist
Michael Gross Cover artist
Angus McKie Cover artist
Gary Friedman Cover artist
Jacqui Morgan Illustrator
Stanislaw Zagorski Cover artist
Mike Gross Cover artist
E. F. Benson Contributor
Greye La Spina Contributor

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Works
168
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#5,533
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
45
ISBNs
190
Languages
5

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