|
DON'T
MISS

Gateway
to Paradise,
The Collected
Stories of Jack Williamson, Volume Six
|
FOR
CHARITY
In Memory of
Wonder's Child
Edited by
Stephen Haffner

|
|
Home | Books
| With Folded Hands . . . And Searching Mind
|
With Folded Hands .
. . And Searching Mind,
The Collected Stories of Jack Williamson,
Volume Seven
Jack
Williamson
Foreword by Robert
Silverberg
Cover art by Hubert Rogers
ISBN
9781893887374
$40.00
584-page Hardcover
Full Color Endpapers
Click image to enlarge
Description
The ambitious program
to collect the short fiction of Grand
Master Jack
Williamson continues! The 15 tales in this penultimate volume cover
Williamson's entry into the US Army in 1942 through to his very
successful effort to integrate into the post-WWII science fiction
market.
Featured is the 1948
3-part serial ". . . And Searching Mind," which Williamson re-wrote
into his most famous work, The
Humanoids. Other classics in this volume include the first
"Humanoids" story, "With Folded Hands . . ."; "Breakdown," set in the
same universe as his novel co-authored with James Gunn, Star Bridge; and his much-reprinted
classic, "The Equalizer." Appearing in either book-form or hardcover
for the first time are "Cold Front Coming," "Hocus-Pocus Universe,"
"The Hitch-Hiker's Package," and "You Can't Beat a Marine." Also
included is Williamson's
afterword with his recollections on the genesis of these tales and the
World War II-era science fiction field.
As with previous
volumes
in this series, the
full-color endpapers
reproduce the original magazine covers (with artwork by pulp masters
including Hubert Rogers, Earle K. Bergey and Frank R. Paul) of the
stories
herein,
and the
binding is designed to match the 1940s editions of Williamson's works
published by Fantasy Press. The book
is smythe-sewn, bound in full cloth, and printed on acid-neutral paper,
with full-color endpapers reproducing the original pulp magazine cover
art.
With a foreword by
legendary author, editor, and long-time friend of
Williamson (and fellow Science Fiction Grand Master), Robert
Silverberg, With Folded Hands . . .
And Searching Mind represents the
changing state of mid-20th Century American Science Fiction and
continues the
documentation of Williamson's unparalleled career.
|
|
Table of Contents
"Foreword"
by Robert Silverberg
"Backlash" (Astounding Science Fiction, Aug '41)
"Breakdown"
(Astounding Science Fiction, Jan
'42)
"Conscience,
LTD." (Unknown, Aug
'43)
"Cold Front
Coming" (Blue Book, Jun
'45)
"The Equalizer"
(Astounding Science Fiction, Mar '47)
"With Folded Hands .
. ."
(Astounding Science Fiction, Jul '47)
". .
. And Searching Mind" Astounding Science Fiction, Mar, Apr, May '48)
"The Moon and Mr.
Wick" (Comet, Sum '50)
"The Cold Green
Eye" (Fantastic, Mar/Apr
'53)
"Hocus-Pocus
Universe" (Science Stories,
Oct '53)
"Operation Gravity" (Science
Fiction Plus, Oct '53)
"The Hitch-Hiker's Package" (Fantastic
Universe, May '54)
"Guinevere for Everybody" (Star
Science Fiction Stories No. 3, 1954)
"You Can't Beat a Marine" (El
Portal, May '56)
"Beans" (The Magazine of
Fantasy & Science Fiction, Nov '58)
"Afterword" by Jack Williamson
Reviews
Jack
Williamson was a grand master of the science fiction genre. His
original tales ranged from
full length novels to the short stories. The seventh volume in the
outstanding Haffner Press series
of Jack Williamson's writings, "With
Folded Hands... And Searching Mind, The Collected
Stories of Jack Williamson" is a 544-page compendium showcasing
fifteen of his short stories
original published in the science fiction magazines of the 1940s and
50s and range from
"Backlash" (Astounding Science
Fiction, August '41); "Conscience, LTD." (Unknown, August
'43); and "Cold Front Coming" (Blue
Book, June '45); to "The Moon and Mr. Wick" (Science Fiction Quarterly,
Summer '50); "Hocus-Pocus Universe" (Science Stories, October '53); and
"Beans" (The
Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, November '58).
Enhanced with an informative
'Foreword' by science fiction author Robert Silverberg, and an
'Afterword' by Jack Williamson, this
superbly organized and presented collection of short stories is a
highly recommended addition to
community library Science Fiction collection -- and an absolutely 'must
read' for the legions of
Jack Williamson fans. Those dedicated fans would also do well to visit
the Haffner Press web
site at www.haffnerpress.com for a complete listing of all of their
"Golden Age" of science
fiction authors, including the previous six volumes comprising their
Jack Williamson series.
--Midwest
BookReview, June 7, 2010
For science
fiction fans this volume is a particular treat. A fair
number of solid sf names disappeared after the war because they
couldn't write for the audience just then emerging. Jack Williamson
not only appealed to that audience he became one of its favorites. I've
read just about half the stories in this book and each one highlights
Williamson's virtues as a writer--a tight, dramatic style that
satisfies those looking for both action and the kind of interior life
common to all his characters.The introduction by Robert Silverberg is
excellent. This is number seven in the Collected Works of Jack
Williamson and, as with the earlier volumes, there's pleasure in just
holding it. You rarely see this kind of craftmanship today.
--Ed Gorman, author of Fast
Track and
Fools
Rush In
Excerpts
TBA
|
|
HAFFNER PRESS
5005 Crooks Road • Suite 35
Royal Oak, MI 48073-1239
ph: 248-288-4765
info@haffnerpress.com
Copyright © 2010 Haffner Press. All Rights Reserved.
|
FEATURED ITEMS
Stark and the
Star Kings
by
Edmond Hamilton
&
Leigh Brackett

Seventy-Five: The Diamond Anniversary of a
Science FIction Pioneer--Jack Williamson
Edited by
Stephen Haffner
&
Richard A. Hauptmann

|
|