Sci-Fi/UFO

//Sci-Fi/UFO
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  • Their name: Station K. Their goal: World domination through espionage. Their twisted creed: Hitler was right...Their secret weapon: The Black Room...A terrifying story of vicious intrigue, horrific conspiracy and relentless suspense that highlights the nature of the armoury of psychological techniques available to secret agencies...
  • The sudden arrival of the K'Ronarin fleet saved Earth from enslavement to the insectoid biofabs and a new interstellar age has dawned on the planet.  John Harrison, hero of the Biofab war, can relax - or can he? Unknown to the Alliance, a few renegade biofabs escaped through a dimensional portal into an alternate universe and they are rebuilding their forces for a counter-strike against humanity - in both universes.  Harrison is catapulted into a strange world to discover the location of the biofab nests and burn it out before a new generation hatches.  It won't be easy - in this version of Earth, Harrison is  a revolutionary on the run from the secret police of the Fourth Reich! Cover art by Alan Gutierrez.

  • It's 1942, the Titanic is still cruising and the world is at peace.  Suddenly, there's a distress call from Counter-Earth, our twin planet on the other side of the sun.  A ship is launched with Albert Einstein and the first woman pro baseball player - Babe  Didriksen - on the crew. But at the same time, Juan Peron and his lovely Evita launch a faster ship from Argentina, armed for war in space. Who will reach Counter-Earth first? A brains-and-baseball alliance of American heroes?  Or an Argentinian temptress and her fascist husband? Reviewed as  'audaciously inventive...a wild romp through a very strange universe.' Cover art by George Barr.
  • This volume contains: The Golden Helix, Theodore Sturgeon: The stranded humans worshipped it... yet it was making them less than human... Home From The Shore, Gordon R. Dickson: When the Sea-Born cadets walk out of space academy in protest, the stage is set for the long impending clash between the sea and land. Can these two races co-operate, or will they destroy each other first? Nightwings, Robert Silverberg:  It was Avluela the Flier's scarlet and ebony wings that lead the Watcher to the seven hills of the ancient city, leaving the skies and deep space unguarded. And so the invaders came and conquered... Cover art by Angus McKie.
  • It’s the 1st of June, 1914 and Hugh Stanton, ex-soldier and celebrated adventurer is quite literally the loneliest man on earth. No one he has ever known or loved has been born yet. Perhaps now they never will be. Stanton knows that a great and terrible war is coming. A collective suicidal madness that will destroy European civilization and bring misery to millions in the century to come. He knows this because, for him, that century is already history. Somehow he must change that history. He must prevent the war. A war that will begin with a single bullet. But can a single bullet truly corrupt an entire century? And, if so - could another single bullet save it?
  • Theoretical mathematicians are at the top of society, geneticists determine mate selection - and the Pope is a computer.  Hell is a distant planet. Space travel has been conquered and abandoned.  Haldane IV and Helix were a part of an ultra-rational society where mathematicians did not write poetry, where mathematicians did not fall in love with poets, and where most specifically, Haldane IV, young mathematician, couldn't possibly marry Helix, the attractive poet of his choice. It was in the best interests of the human race, said the State, that mates be selected for all professional people according to strict scientific principles. Their love is  discovered and they must be put on trial. Cover art by Chris Foss.
  • Watson's first short story collection. The title story introduces a time machine which moves backwards through time but only at the same rate as normal time reversed - to travel twenty years into the past takes twenty years. Attempts are made to to communicate with its mad occupant as he grows younger and more sane. Why has he embarked on this journey? Other tales in this volume: Thy Blood Like Milk; Sitting On A Starwood Stool; Agoraphobia AD 2000; Programmed Love Story; The Girl Who Was Art; Our Loves So Truly Meridional; Immune Dreams; My Soul Swims In A Goldfish Bowl; The Roentgen Refugees; A Time-Span To Conjure With; On Cooking The First Hero In pring; The Event Horizon. 

  • Book III of the second Uplift trilogy. By the award winning author of  The Postman. The brutal enemy that has  pursued them for centuries has arrived.  Now the fugitive settlers of Jijo - human and alien - brace for the final confrontation.  Their only hope is the Earthship Streaker crewed by uplifted dolphins and commanded  by an untested human. Yet more than just the fate of Jijo hangs in the balance.  Streaker carries a cargo of ancient artifacts that may unlock the secret of those who first brought intelligent life to the Galaxies. Many believe a dire prophecy has come to pass: an age of terrifying changes that could end Galactic civilisation. As dozens of white dwarf stars stand ready to explode, the survival of sentient life in the Universe rests on the most improbable dream - that age old antagonists of different races can recognise the unity of consciousness. Cover art by Jim Burns.
  • Behrooz Wolf had lost his job, his lover and possibly his mind.  Plagued by recurring hallucinations of a bizarre dancing man, he hooked himself up to a dream machine to escape.  But there was no escape for the Solar System's leading expert on form-change.  In the off-Earth habitats of the Outer System, form-change machines were malfunctioning at an increasing - and increasingly fatal - rate.  Next thing he knew, Wolf was off-Earth, racing to solve the form-change problem, dodging anti-Earth rebels and hunting the Dancing Man.  AS the pieces of puzzle fall into place, Wolf realises the unimaginable scope of what's going on.  But even he never guessed the answer lay outside of the Universe itself. Cover art by Stephen Hickman.