Difference between revisions of "Adventures in Time and Space"

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''Adventures in Time and Space'' was an anthology of [[SF]] stories edited by [[Raymond J. Healy]] and [[J. Francis McComas]] and published in 1946.  It arguably collected the very best of short [[SF]] from the [[Golden Age]] of 1937-1945 and was a pivotal in showing the next several generations of [[fans]] what that era had produced.
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''Adventures in Time and Space'' (1946), a celebrated anthology of [[SF]] stories edited by [[Raymond J. Healy]] and [[J. Francis McComas]], arguably collected the very best of short [[SF]] from the [[Golden Age]] of 1937–45. It was pivotal in showing the next several generations of [[fans]] what that era had produced.
  
 
A second edition was also published in 1946 that eliminated the last five stories.  A Modern Library edition was issued in 1957.
 
A second edition was also published in 1946 that eliminated the last five stories.  A Modern Library edition was issued in 1957.
  
 
In ''[[Astounding Science Fiction]]'' readers' surveys in both 1952 and 1956, it was rated the best SF book ever published.
 
In ''[[Astounding Science Fiction]]'' readers' surveys in both 1952 and 1956, it was rated the best SF book ever published.
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===Contents===
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* [[Robert A. Heinlein]], "Requiem" (1940)
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* [[Don A. Stuart]] ([[pen name]] of [[John W. Campbell, Jr.]]), "Forgetfulness" (1937)
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* [[Lester del Rey]], "Nerves" (1942)
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* [[P. Schuyler Miller]], "The Sands of Time" (1937)
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* [[Lewis Padgett]] (pen name of [[Henry Kuttner]] and [[C. L. Moore]]), "The Proud Robot" (1943)
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* [[A. E. van Vogt]], "Black Destroyer" (1939)
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* [[Eric Frank Russell]], "Symbiotica" (1943)
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* [[Raymond Z. Gallun]], "Seeds of the Dusk" (1938)
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* [[Lee Gregor]] (pen name of [[Milton A. Rothman]]) (co-written with [[Frederik Pohl]]), "Heavy Planet" (1939)
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* Lewis Padgett, "Time Locker" (1943)
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* [[Cleve Cartmill]], "The Link" (1942)
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* [[Maurice G. Hugi]] (possibly co-written by Eric Frank Russell), "Mechanical Mice" (1941)
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* [[Willy Ley]], "V-2: Rocket Cargo Ship" (essay) (1945)
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* [[Alfred Bester]], "Adam and No Eve" (1941)
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* [[Isaac Asimov]], "Nightfall" (1941)
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* [[Harry Bates]], "A Matter of Size" (1934)
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* P. Schuyler Miller, "As Never Was" (1944)
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* [[Anthony Boucher]], "Q. U. R." (1943)
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* Don A. Stuart, "Who Goes There?" (1938)
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* Robert A. Heinlein, "The Roads Must Roll" (1940)
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* A. E. van Vogt, "Asylum" (1942)
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* [[Ross Rocklynne]], "Quietus" (1940)
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* Lewis Padgett, "The Twonky" (1942)
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* [[A. M. Phillips]], "Time-Travel Happens!" (essay about the [https://the-line-up.com/moberly-jourdain-incident-1901 Moberly-Jourdain incident]) (1939)
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* [[Robert Moore Williams]], "Robot's Return" (1938)
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* [[L. Sprague de Camp]], "The Blue Giraffe" (1939)
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* [[Webb Marlowe]] (pen name of [[J. Francis McComas]]), "Flight Into Darkness" (1943)
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* A. E. van Vogt, "The Weapons Shop" (1942)
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* Harry Bates, "Farewell to the Master" (1940)
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* [[R. DeWitt Miller]], "Within the Pyramid" (1937)
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* [[Henry Hasse]], "He Who Shrank" (1936)
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* [[Anson MacDonald]] (pen name of Robert A. Heinlein), "By His Bootstraps" (1941)
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* [[Fredric Brown]], "The Star Mouse" (1942)
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* [[Raymond F. Jones]], "Correspondence Course" (1945)
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* [[S. Fowler Wright]], "Brain" (1932)
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{{publication | year=1946}}
 
{{publication | year=1946}}

Latest revision as of 22:00, 1 November 2022

Adventures in Time and Space (1946), a celebrated anthology of SF stories edited by Raymond J. Healy and J. Francis McComas, arguably collected the very best of short SF from the Golden Age of 1937–45. It was pivotal in showing the next several generations of fans what that era had produced.

A second edition was also published in 1946 that eliminated the last five stories. A Modern Library edition was issued in 1957.

In Astounding Science Fiction readers' surveys in both 1952 and 1956, it was rated the best SF book ever published.

Contents[edit]



Publication 1946
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