A.E. Van Vogt holds up reasonably well, though there is a strong whiff of Cold War symbolism in many of these stories. Nevertheless, this is a bargain survey of one of the genre's classic practitioners. Read more. 2 people found this helpful. Helpful. Report abuse. JDDD. out of 5 stars sci fi/5(11). · Destination: Universe is a collection of late 40's/early 50's hard science fiction short stories by A.E. Van Vogt. The prose is clumsy and the plotting is often second rate, but the ideas are so far out and crazy that it's worth a read. Most of the stories originally appeared in /5. A.E. Van Vogt holds up reasonably well, though there is a strong whiff of Cold War symbolism in many of these stories. Nevertheless, this is a bargain survey of one of the genre's classic practitioners. Read more. 2 people found this helpful. Helpful. Report abuse. JDDD. out of 5 stars sci fi.4/5(13).
It was later republished in some anthologies as Resurrection, but it appeared in van Vogt's first anthology of his own short stories (Destination: Universe!, in ) with its original title, and it was referred to by that name by him in later interviews, so The Monster clearly is the proper "canonical" title of this quite perfect story, one. Destination: Universe A E Van Vogt Signet S Vintage Sci Fi PB Mars Pulp. $ + $ shipping + $ shipping + $ shipping. Seller % positive Seller % positive Seller % positive. The Weapon Shops of Isher And The Universe Maker by A.E. van Vogt Sci-fi Vintage. This was first proposed by AE Van Vogt in in his book Destination Universe (AKA Voyage of the Space Beagle). The actual development has taken a course somewhat dissimilar to the fiction. Nexialism is applied generalization, from the word Nexus - connection - putting together of facts, techniques and methods that have been separated.
DESTINATION: UNIVERSE! by van Vogt, A. E. and a great selection of related books, art and collectibles available now at www.doorway.ru Destination: Universe! is the second collection of science fiction short stories by Canadian-American writer A. E. van Vogt, published in hardcover by Pellegrini Cudahy in , and repeatedly reprinted in paperback, by three different publishers, over the next 25 years. The first British edition appeared in , followed by several paperback reprints. A. E. Van Vogt was one of my favorite authors growing up. Recently, in researching a talk about my novel, Rome's Revolution, I stumbled across a mention of one of his stories written in So I bought this book. I read the story and found it goofy. My taste must have changed radically over the years.
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