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Following its acclaimed three-volume edition of the novels of
science fiction master Philip K. Dick, The Library of America now
presents a two-volume anthology of nine groundbreaking works from
the golden age of the modern science fiction novel, works by turns
satiric, adventurous, incisive, and hauntingly lyrical. Long
unnoticed or dismissed by the literary establishment, these
visionary "outsider" novels grappled in fresh ways with a world in
rapid transformation and have gradually been recognized as American
classics that opened new imaginative territory in American
writing.This second volume contains: Robert Heinlein / "Double
Star"Alfred Bester / "The Stars My Destination"James Blish / "A
Case of Conscience"Algis Budrys / "Who?"Fritz Leiber / "The Big
Time"
In a deluxe two-volume collector's edition boxed set, eight
mind-bending novels from science fiction's most transformative
decade, including the landmark classic Flowers for Algernon The
tumultuous 1960s was a watershed decade for American science
fiction. As the nation raced to the moon, acknowledged masters from
the genre's golden age reached the height of their powers. As it
confronted calls for civil rights and countercultural revolution, a
new wave of brilliant young voices emerged, upending the genre's
pulp conventions with newfound literary sophistication; female,
queer, and nonwhite authors broke into the ranks of SF writers,
introducing provocative new protagonists and themes. Here, in a
deluxe, two-volume collector's set, editor Gary K. Wolfe gathers
eight wildly inventive novels, the decade's best: Daniel Keyes'
beloved Flowers for Algernon and Poul Anderson's madcap The High
Crusade; Clifford D. Simak's Hugo Award-winning Way Station; Roger
Zelazny's post-apocalyptic . . . And Call Me Conrad (previously
published as This Immortal); Joanna Russ' Picnic on Paradise, a
pioneering work of feminist SF, and Samuel R. Delany's
proto-cyberpunk space opera Nova; R.A. Lafferty's quirky,
neglected, utterly original Past Master; and Jack Vance's haunting
Emphyrio.
"The critical vocabulary of the mainstream often give short shrift
to the fantastic, and scholars of the fantastic have often had to
look elsewhere for their critical termionology. Such scholars will
find Wolfe's work an excellent resource." Choice
Gary K. Wolfe examines the life and work of British author David
Lindsay, most famous for his novels "A Voyage to Arcturus," "The
Haunted Woman," and "The Devil's Tor." Starmont Reader's Guide 9.
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