Tanias Possible Science Fiction Reading in the Fifties: A.E. van Vogt

Explore Tania's possible science fiction reading list from the fifties, featuring A.E. van Vogt's iconic works. Dive into classic fifties sci-fi books that shaped the genre.

Slan Cover
Book

Slan

by Alfred Elton Van Vogt

After escaping extermination by the humans, young Jommy Cross searches for th meaning of the Slans' great mental superiority.
Wake of the Raven Cover
Book

Wake of the Raven

 

No summary available.
The Weapon Makers Cover
Book

The Weapon Makers

 

No summary available.
The Book of Ptath Cover
Book

The Book of Ptath

 

No summary available.
The World of Null-A Cover
Book

The World of Null-A

by A. E. van Vogt

Presents the science fiction classic set in the year 2650, where the Games Machine--twenty-five thousand electronic brains--sets the course of people's lives.
Book Cover
Book

[No Title]

 

No summary available.
The voyage of the Space Beagle Cover
Book

The voyage of the Space Beagle

 

No summary available.
The Empire of Isher Cover
Book

The Empire of Isher

 

No summary available.
Zorn Cover
Book

Zorn

by Graham Worthington

In the year 2035 it's cool to be bisexual - or at least pretend to be - and cool to be young, but to be both and on holiday in France is the coolest of all. Zorn and family are at The Anders Hotel, in the little port of Roknor, whose main attraction in daytime is its crowded beach, and in the evening its many clubs. Rejoicing in recently turning sixteen, Zorn has ten days to find Holiday Love, and isn't helped by the presence of Kevin, a coarse and violent homophobe. But despite their differences, neither can escape life's challenges, and find to their dismay that our joys and sorrows come mixed and inseparable. The mid twenty-first century is a time of looking back, a time laden with much nostalgia for the past, but little money. The Great World Depression of the 2020s has seen to that. It is a time of thumbing through the music, films and fashions of the last century, a time of imitating the lost Golden Age of the 1900s. It is also the era of core language, the final perfection of politically correct speech avoiding the use of such hideously offensive words as "he" and "she," with all their built-in stereotypes, all their dangerous assumptions about gender roles and sexuality. Yet it is a time when, though all has changed, nothing has changed. The sea still surges to the distant horizon, the waves still crash to the beach, and on these daily washed sands new people act out the ancient dramas afresh. Zorn is a story of romance, adventure and coming of age in this post-apocalyptic society.