Sci-Fi/UFO

//Sci-Fi/UFO
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  • Book V of Tomorrow, When The War Began. When you're on your knees, there's only thing to do - stand up again. Ellie and her friends have stared defeat in the face. They've been bashed and battered by it, brought to breaking point. Now it's time to hit back, to come out fighting...now they really are Burning for Revenge...Cover photograph by Bill Willcox.
  • Few knew of the discoveries referred to in secret code words by the astronauts in their description of the moon; or the strange moving lights they reported. The author allegedly fought through the official veil of secrecy to study thousands of NASA photographs, interviewed dozens of officials and listened to hours of astronauts tapes to present this stunning conclusion: NASA and many of the world's top scientists have known for years that there is intelligent life on the moon.  Illustrated with black and white photographs.
  • The world is driving itself to its own funeral. The car, so long the symbol of freedom and liberation, has become society's ball and chain. In environmental terms it wreaks more destruction than decent-sized wars and in return it carries us around our cities rather more slowly than a bicycle. How did it get to this?  Everyone wants to unblock the jams - or perhaps they don't. Everyone wants cleaner, more efficient engines - maybe. We all long for the day that filthy, poisonous expensive oil will no longer be the blood in the veins of our way of life.  Isn't that the bottom line? It depends on what we are prepared to lose: like, the wasted hours of gnawing the steering wheel and just wishing everyone else on earth would get out of the sodding way; the billions of tons of pollution; the endless death and destruction; the wholesale ruin of our environment. But there are those who would lose something much more important: Money - and power...Cover art by David Scutt.
  • Book III of The Cineverse Cycle. Roger Gordon, lately of Earth - his passion for old movies matched only by his passion for the delectable Delores - has been appointed to lead the forces of good in a last ditch effort to rid the many cinematic worlds of the Cineverse of the evil of Doctor Dread.  The change is happening - war movies intertwine with drawing room comedies, art films with westerns, film noir mysteries with Italian sword and sandal epics.  The arch fiend Doctor Dread - whose desire for total destruction is matched only by his lack of good taste - is hastening the process with the help of Big Bertha, Menge the Merciless and Mother Antoinette, Mistress of Evil (and Roger's mother.)  Can Roger polish his aphorisms in time to control the changing environment and confront the Plotmaster? Cover art by Josh Kirby.
  • Jef Robini was heading for Everon with a highly controversial cargo.  For eight years on Earth Jef had tried to rear the maolot cub which was the final legacy from his brother.  But the maolot had failed to grow into the giant cat that was Everon's largest, most dangerous life-form. And now Jef was returning the creature to its natural home, the colonised planet of Everon.  He knew the planet was barren and he would have to fight to survive.  But nothing prepared him for the incomprehensible strangeness, the mind-blasting wonder of the true Masters of Everon. Cover art by Michael Embden.
  • Ole Doc Methuselah was the name he was known on a myriad scattered planets, for he was the most  famous member of the most elite organisation of the cosmos, the Soldiers of Light. Not a  military soldier - the enemies he fought were disease, corruption and the warped psychology that spread in the isolation of mankind's lost planetary colonies. Encountering double dealing,mutations and the unexpected, Ole Doc and his many armed companion Hippocrates share a series of astonishing adventures in their endless journey  through the galaxies. Cover art by Gerry Grace.

  • The colonists were chosen by lottery: when your number came up, you were herded into a spacer and shipped out. Guarding the unwilling settlers were the Outposters: soldiers, diplomats, traders...men as hard and deadly as the star-wastes themselves. They needed to be - the alien Meda V'Dan raided the colonies at will. But between the savage attacks of the alien race and the helpless colonists stood the Outposters. Mark Ten Roos was one, and from the scattered rabble of his lonely outpost he fashioned a space army that could destroy the Meda V'Dan.                                                                                                 o
  • This volume includes: Flatlander, Larry Niven; The Crime and Glory of Commander Suzdal; Cordwainer Smith; Overproof, Jonathon Blake Mackenzie; Poor Planet, J.T. McIntosh; Shamar's War, Kris Neville; The Tactful Saboteur, Frank Herbert; Ministry of Disturbance, H. Beam Piper.
  • The U.S.S.Enterprise NCC - 1701 - B is launched - and Captain Kirk mysteriously disappears. Seventy eight years later, Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC - 1701 - D receives a distress call from a remote scientific observatory. A newly developed super-weapon has been stolen by a desperate scientist with an insane plot. Captain Picard must seek out the one person with the power to help: Captain Kirk - thought to be long dead. Together, the two captains will be tested and forced to make sacrifices to save countless millions from a madman bent on mass destruction. This edition contains colour photographs and a special 'behind-the-scenes' look at the making of the film.

  • They weren't ordinary cats. There was something strange about the way they looked at Jim and Elly, as if they could see inside their minds and knew exactly what they were thinking. And they could talk by telepathy instead of speech. They were the Star Ka'ats, a super-intelligent race of cats from outer space. They had come to Earth on a special mission. But when Jim and Elly crossed their path, the Star Ka'ats suddenly found their plans might have to change... For younger readers.
  • 10 November, 2996...The ship Parkinson was transporting famous entertainer Chelsie Bradford on a tour of the galaxy, to raise funds for a very unpopular interstellar war.  Then the deaths began.  Captain Inspector Nate Blackburn knew the killer would strike again.  But he didn't know why.  Were the murders acts of sabotage - or acts of twisted love? Cover art by Ron Miller.
  • There Will Be War, Volume IV. In this volume: Macdonough's Song, Rudyard Kipling: Whether the State can loose and bind in Heaven as well as on Earth... The Cloak And The Staff, Gordon R. Dickson: A skilled human translator tries to balance his desire to stay alive with his need to lash out at Earth's monstrous overlords, who treat humans as cattle, or at best, pets. Winter Snow, Eric Vinicoff and Marcia Martin: From the President Nivling series. A Way Out Maybe… or A Dead End For Sure, John Brunner: A Disarmer's Assessment of Western 'Defence' Policy.  A Letter from the Soviet Union, Alexander Shatravka: The author was arrested in 1982 for his activities in the Unofficial Group To Establish Trust Between The USSR and the US.  Emergency Ration , Theodore R. Cogswell: Cannibalistic aliens come up with what they think is  afoolproof method of dining on humans... The Proud Foot of the Conqueror, Reginald Bretnor: Will there be a time when rule with honour will succeed? Lepanto, Gilbert Keith Chesterton: The epic poem which tells of the defeat of the Ottoman fleet of Ali Pasha by the Christian crusader, Don John of Austria. A Cure for Croup, Edward P. Hughes: Despite the fall of civilisation, the villagers of Barley Cross are determined to live normal lives. Battle At Kahlkhopolis, Robert Adams: Centuries after World War III, the Horseclans roam the vast emptiness of the Americas. Conqueror of Vectis, Keith Taylor: A fantastic tale of betrayal and revenge. Pretty Baby, Ray Peekner: A day and age of engineered, perfect babies...The Man in the Gray Weapons Suit, Paul J. Nahin: Will A.I and 'fifth generation' computers be the future weapons of warfare? Reagan Vs. The Scientists, Robert Jastrow: Jastrow, the head of NASA's theoretical division, discusses the Reagan administration response to the USSR. Joined the Space Force To Wear My Blues, John Maddox Roberts: Boredom can be just as deadly as an enemy attack... PsyOps, Stefan T. Possony: On psychological Warfare.  Three Soldiers, D.C. Poyer: A German WW2 officer, a Zulu warrior and a Roman centurion all wake to find they have been abducted and pitted in gladiatorial combat against alien beings. Interim Justice, William F. Wu: A futuristic tale in which lawyers are obsolete and disputes are settled with war games. No Truce With Kings, Poul Anderson: In a post-apocalyptic United States, the Pacific States of America are racked by wars backed on one side by the "Espers", a movement claiming their followers achieve great psychic powers.Cover art by Bob Layzell.  
  • Book III of Man From Atlantis. The dread moment had arrived - a space probe had  carried back alien spores. Active, intelligent, indestructible, they were unlike anything science had seen before. Invading human bodies, creating havoc and madness, Mark Harris knew he would serve their will. The alternative was too overwhelming to consider - not just for him but for all mankind. The spores had come; the Earth was their hostage. There was only one way to send them back, but time was running out...
  • Book II of Cities In Flight. The natural resources of the Earth have long been exhausted and city after city goes 'Okie' - lifts itself off the face of the planet to earn its living as a migrant worker among the stars. Now the 'spindizzies' that will take Scranton, Pennsylvania up into outer space are warming up. A last patrol makes sure the city perimeter is clear. He didn't know it yet, but for the redneck boy watching cautiously from the bushes, this was t be the first day of a new and very different life...Cover art by Chris Foss.
  • Book I of Patterns Of Chaos. Palaton was among the elite of the Choyan race, a tezar, gifted with the power to navigate the Patterns of Chaos, able to pilot a starship from one planetary system another faster than light speeds. No other member race of the Compact had this ability and none had ever been able to learn the secrets of the tezars. Yet there were those ready to use any means to break the Choyan monopoly on FTL transport; those who, if they learnt of it, might take advantage of the fact that the world of Cho hovered on the brink of civil war, with the three ruling Houses - Star, Sky and Earth - watching Emperor Panshinea's slow decline, making their own plans to gain ascendancy in the coming power struggle. Palaton his fighting his own personal struggle - the knowledge that his tezar powers may be burning out - a fate which eventually befell all Choyan pilots. Yet he would soon be drawn into the Houses' political conflict, forced to pursue rumours of a planet where forbidden experimentation was being carried out - experimentation which could renew a tezar's unique abilities with the aid of a race that had not yet won Compact membership, a race that called itself human...Cover art by Vincent Di Fate.
  • Book I of Homecoming. The planet Harmony had been settled by humans almost 40 million years ago. The colony had been placed under the care of an artificial intelligence, the Oversoul, high in orbit. This master computer had one overriding command - guard the people of Harmony. But now the oversoul is in danger. Its systems are failing. Soon, within a thousand years, war will break out on Harmony unless the Oversoul can be repaired. The master computer has determined that it must be taken back to lost Earth; someone on Harmony must be given back the knowledge of space travel in order to save the planet from disaster. For one family, about to be caught up in an approaching civil war, life will change forever. Cover art by Keith Parkinson.
  • Book IV of The Long Earth. It is the middle of the twenty-first century. After the cataclysmic upheavals of Step Day and the Yellowstone eruption, humanity is spreading farther into the Long Earth. Society, on a battered Datum Earth and beyond, continues to evolve. And new challenges emerge. Now an elderly and cantankerous AI, Lobsang is living with Agnes in an exotic, far-distant world. He's determined to lead a normal life in New Springfield - they even adopt a child. But there are rumors, strange sightings in the sky. On this world, something isn't right...Millions of steps away - learning about a hidden family history and the father he never knew - Joshua receives an urgent summons from New Springfield. Lobsang has come to understand that what has blighted his Earth is also a threat to all the worlds of the Long Earth. Countering this threat will require the combined efforts of humankind, machine, and the super-intelligent Next. And some must make the ultimate sacrifice...
  • Nicholas Bennington Flair is brilliant, damned and determined to make sense out of a senseless world he never made - a world where babies are born in test-tubes and those who are born naturally are known as obsos (obsoletes)...Almost all drugs are legal...the government sells marijuana...sex is called using and good sex is profitable. But Nicholas has one fatal flaw - he wants life to have charm as well as make sense - an archaic concept in the mechanised world of the Tomorrow File. Described as 'a nightmare ride into the future'.
  • A whisperjewel has summoned Dirk t’Larien to Worlorn, and a love he thinks he lost. But Worlorn isn’t the world Dirk imagined, and Gwen Delvano is no longer the woman he once knew. She is bound to another man, and to a dying planet that is trapped in twilight. Gwen needs Dirk’s protection, and he will do anything to keep her safe, even if it means challenging the barbaric man who has claimed her. But an impenetrable veil of secrecy surrounds them all, and it’s becoming impossible for Dirk to distinguish between his allies and his enemies. In this dangerous triangle, one is hurtling toward escape, another toward revenge, and the last toward a brutal, untimely demise. Cover art by Jim Burns.
  • Book I of Nidorian. The people of Nidor lived by the Law and the Scripture, remembering always the Great Cataclysm has nearly destroyed their world only five thousand years before.  They gave thanks daily to the Great Light that had spared their ancestors and knew that only respect for tradition would keep their children safe.  Then the strangers arrived - falling from clouds and clothes in light.  They called themselves Earthmen...Cover art by Walter Velez.
  • Book I of Star Rigger. Panglor Balef was in trouble. A black-listed freighter pilot with nothing to his name but a battered craft and an inseparable alien companion, Panglor has to take whatever work comes his way - even when it comes to murder on an interstellar space route. But that's just the beginning.  Panglor finds himself a part of what might be an hallucination or what might be the discovery that will revolutionise space flight. Cover art by Tony Roberts.
  • In the late 21st century, man-made, self-replicating organisms called mycora - smaller than bacteria - mutate and sweep across the globe in a chain reaction so swift and deadly there is not time to do anything but flee from an Earth destroyed buy the science created to sustain it. Now the remnants of humanity, clinging to the asteroid belt and the moons of Jupiter are about to face their greatest test. Mycora  are incorporating gene sequences to elude human defences, perhaps eve to thrive in the harsh environment of the outer system.  The only way to counter this is for the few surviving members of mankind to go to the diseased heart of the Mycosystem - Earth. Cover art by Chris Moore.
  • The Borg, Starfleet's most feared enemy, has set a direct course for Earth. Their mission: to assimilate humanity. Only one man can stop them. Only one man knows their weakness. Captain Jean-Luc Picard. In the new Starship Enterprise, fully upgraded and even more powerful than before, Captain Picard, Commander Riker, Lieutenant Commander Data and the rest of the crew are about to embark on the greatest battle of their lives. The very existence of humankind depends on their success. If they fail, life on Earth will never be the same. This is a fantastic item of film memorabilia for the die-hard Trekkie, full of great colour photos from the iconic film with the story line.
  • Book I of Harvest Of Stars. Earth is in the grip of the Avantists, an oppressive regime that has crushed dissent and now threatens the last bastion of liberty, a maverick interplanetary corporation known as Fireball. Kyra Davis, beautiful young space pilot, is on a mission to rescue an electronic ghost - Fireball's founder, Anson Guthrie, whose mind was stored in a computer after his death - and rally the resistance to strike a blow against tyranny. Pursued by Avantist forces, she and Guthrie engage in a desperate battle of wits against a brilliant adversary -  a computer copy of Guthrie that has been reprogrammed to serve the enemy. On an interstellar odyssey that takes Kyra from Earth's rebel enclaves to the decadent court of a lunar colony and the endangered frontier world of Demeter until under the light of Alpha Centauri, she undergoes an awesome transformation to ensure humankind's survival among the stars. Cover art by Vincent Di Fate.

  • Barney Boru is a professional assassin for the Galactic Confederacy,with broad power to determine the justice of any mission. He's been sent to Siegel's World to kill the King of Lokar but mysterious powers want to ensure that Barney doesn't invoke the Walkaway Clause - so they send their own man in. Now two assassins stalk the King and each other - and neither of them will walk away. Cover art by Tom Kidd.

  • A volume of Christian science fiction. The Streets of Ashkelon, Harry Harrison: A tyrannical God demands a dreadful sacrifice before permitting a future race to serve Him. Balaam, Anthony Boucher: A treacherous God lays death traps for the faithful. Unhuman Sacrifice, Katherine MacLean: A foolish God plays thoughtless games with human lives.  The Shrine of Temptation, Judith Merril: Humans try to understand the strange rituals of the inhabitants of another planet. The Army Comes To Venus, Eric Frank Russell: A frontier town on Venus, populated solely by rough male miners and a few prostitutes, is invaded - by the Salvation Army! Apostle to Alpha, Betty T. Balke: A preacher is sent to evangelise the aliens - but do they need it?  God Of The Playback, Stephen Dentinger: The ultimate machine age God, a robot incapable of feelings, begins creating Man in his image... Robot Son, Robert F. Young: A Tech-God performs magical, chilling miracles...That Evening Sun Go Down, Arthur Sellings: In a possible future, humans believe they are descended from aliens who came to Earth after the fall of civilisation. ; The Wolfram Hunters, Edward H. Hoch: A vengeful deity painfully and slowly begins to kill off the pitiful handful of survivors of a nuclear war. Cover art by Virgil Finlay.
  • The United States is ravaged by disease and stifled by martial law. With whole cities falling to a lethal virus known as V-CIDS, the  panicked authorities take the precaution of herding the infected into huge specially designed internment camps. Into one of these prisons stumbles Michael Barris, a wealthy interactive television mogul with a controversial past. He is searching for his sick son, spending a fortune and his future for the answers. What he finds is a carefully guarded nightmare - one that he helped to create. As he battles to survive he comes to understand that the camps have a far more sinister agenda than the military is willing to admit...