Book picks similar to
Songs the Dead Men Sing by George R.R. Martin
fantasy
terror
science-fiction
horror
Aftershock & Others: 19 Oddities
F. Paul Wilson - 2009
Paul Wilson, hailed by the Rocky Mountain News as "among the finest storytellers of our times."
Tales from Planet Earth
Arthur C. Clarke - 1989
Clarke, a Science Fiction Writers of America Grand Master, then you want The Collected Stories of Arthur C. Clarke. If you're looking for a representative sample of Clarke's short stories, or for some examples of the creative and extrapolative abilities that established Clarke as one of science fiction's greatest and most important writers, then check out Tales from Planet Earth. Tales from Planet Earth ranges widely across time, but the stories are centered on our home world. Many SF writers confine their visions of earth to its flatlands, but Clarke is three-dimensional; his stories "Hate," "The Deep Range," and "The Man Who Ploughed the Sea" plunge into the ocean, while "The Cruel Sky" ascends the Himalayas. Some stories, like "The Other Tiger" and "'If I Forget Thee, Oh Earth...'," end on chilling twists. "The Road to the Sea" spans centuries and millennia to explore how humanity's exodus to the stars may affect the world left behind. "Hate" considers how transcendence of the Earth's atmosphere may affect ancient enmities. "The Parasite" demonstrates a scary nastiness not usually associated with Clarke. "The Wall of Darkness" is set on an alternate-universe earth so different from ours, and "The Lion of Comarre" is set in a future so far away, that both stories feel like fantasy; but both are rigorously extrapolated from scientific theory. Two lighthearted entertainments, "The Next Tenants" and "The Man Who Ploughed the Sea," are from Tales of the White Hart. All of the stories in Tales from Planet Earth are recommended. The iBooks 2001 Anniversary Edition of Tales from Planet Earth collects 14 SF stories first published between 1950 and 1987, including the satire "On Golden Seas," which has "never before [been] collected in any Clarke book." --Cynthia Ward Review "Here...is a collection of Arthur's science fiction stories, science fiction dealing with science, extrapolated intelligently. How you will enjoy it!" ISAAC ASIMOV" Product Description The fiction of Arthur C. Clarke has spanned the universe. He has carried us across unimaginable distances to alien times and places. Yet he has not lost sight of his home. Many of his greatest stories are set-or have their roots-right here on Planet Earth. In this book, Clarke's best stories about our home planet are gathered together. For Arthur C. Clarke, more than any other science fiction writer, "home" is the entire Earth, through all of space and time. In this book, he shows us around his home to share his wonder. He invites us to share his vision and his dream. About the Author Arthur C. Clarke is the author of many seminal works of science fiction, most noteably; 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (Little Brown).
The Complete Professor Challenger Stories
Arthur Conan Doyle - 2013
This complete Professor Challenger collection contains the following works:The Lost WorldThe Poison BeltThe Land of MistThe Disintegration MachineWhen the World Screamed
The Lazy Tour Of Two Idle Apprentices
Charles Dickens - 1857
Writing together, they reported their adventures for Dickens' periodical Household Words, producing a showcase of both long-cherished and entirely novel sides of these well-loved men of letters. Boasting two ghost stories from undisputed masters of the genre, it also uniquely demonstrates their glee in caricaturing themselves and one another—Collins assumes the identity of Thomas Idle (a born-and-bred idler) and Dickens that of Francis Goodchild (laboriously idle). Through their fictional counterparts, the men relentlessly satirize Dickens' maniacal energy and Collins' idleness. The result is an exuberant diary of a journey and a rare insight into one of literature's most famed and intriguing friendships.
The Longest Fall
Liu Cixin - 2012
Using nothing beyond gravity and inertia one could now travel from the eastern to the western hemisphere in less than an hour. The future of travel was not the sky, it was deep below the earth. It all came crashing down when its inventor was accused of crimes against humanity. With its creator a monster in the eyes of the world the tunnel has fallen into disuse, but now it will be used once more ...
The Gods of Bal-Sagoth
Robert E. Howard - 1931
HowardGenius of fantasy, master of the occult, creator of powerful heroes and heroic ages. Readers who have devoured the CONAN saga have only just begun to sample the wonders of the world's greatest writer of fantasy-adventure. Here, together for the first time, are stories that show the full spectrum of the genius of Robert E. Howard:...Shipwrecked on a mysterious island, two sailors find traces of a lost civilization - and memories of their own impossible part in it!...The "last words" of an operatic tenor bring the music of hell to the man who destroyed him....Turlogh O'Brien, mighty Gaelic warrior who serves no master but gold and blood, battles for a kingdom against the fearful ancient gods of Bal-Sagoth.All together for the first time in The Gods of Bal-Sagoth.Contents:The Gods of Bal-SagothCasonetto's Last SongKing of the Forgotten PeopleUsurp the NightCurse of the Golden SkullThe Shadow of the BeastNekht Semerkeht (Completed by Andrew J. Offutt)Restless WatersThe Isle of the Eons (unfinished)