Empire Books In Publication Order
- Castaway’s World / Polymath (1963)
- The Space-Time Juggler (1963)
- The Altar at Asconel (1965)
Max Curfew Books In Publication Order
- A Plague On Both Your Causes (1969)
- Good Men Do Nothing. (1970)
- Honky in the Woodpile (1971)
Standalone Novels In Publication Order
- The Brink (1959)
- Catch a Falling Star / The Hundredth Millennium (1959)
- Echo in the Skull / Give Warning to the World (1959)
- The World Swappers (1959)
- Atlantic Abomination (1960)
- Sanctuary in the Sky (1960)
- The Skynappers (1960)
- Slavers of Space / Into the Slave Nebula (1960)
- I Speak for Earth (1961)
- Meeting at Infinity (1961)
- Secret Agent of Terra / The Avengers of Carrig (1962)
- The Super Barbarians (1962)
- Times Without Number (1962)
- Listen! The Stars! / The Stardroppers (1962)
- The Ladder in the Sky (1962)
- The Astronauts Must Not Land / More Things in Heaven (1963)
- Dreaming Earth (1963)
- The Psionic Menace (1963)
- The Rites of Ohe (1963)
- The crutch of memory (1964)
- Endless Shadow / Manshape (1964)
- To Conquer Chaos (1964)
- The Whole Man (1964)
- The Day of the Star Cities / Age of Miracles (1965)
- Enigma from Tantalus (1965)
- The Long Result (1965)
- The Martian Sphinx (1965)
- The Squares of the City (1965)
- Wear the butchers’ medal (1965)
- The Repairmen of Cyclops (1965)
- A Planet of Your Own (1966)
- The Productions of Time (1967)
- Quicksand (1967)
- Born Under Mars (1967)
- Bedlam Planet (1968)
- Stand on Zanzibar (1968)
- Black Is the Color (1969)
- Double, Double (1969)
- The Jagged Orbit (1969)
- Timescoop (1969)
- The Gaudy Shadows (1970)
- The Devil’s Work (1970)
- The Wrong End of Time (1971)
- The Dramaturges of Yan (1972)
- The Sheep Look Up (1972)
- The Stone that Never Came Down (1973)
- Total Eclipse (1974)
- The Webs of Everywhere (1974)
- The Shockwave Rider (1975)
- The Infinitive of Go (1980)
- Players at the Game of People (1980)
- While There’s Hope (1982)
- The Great Steamboat Race (1983)
- The Crucible of Time (1983)
- The Tides of Time (1984)
- The Shift Key (1987)
- The Days Of March (1988)
- Children of the Thunder (1988)
- A Maze of Stars (1991)
- Muddle Earth (1993)
- Galactic Storm (2020)
Short Stories/Novellas In Publication Order
- Threshold of Eternity (2015)
Short Story Collections In Publication Order
- No Future in It (1962)
- Now Then! (1963)
- No Other Gods But Me (1966)
- Out of My Mind (1967)
- Father of Lies / Mirror Image (1968)
- Not Before Time (1968)
- The Traveller in Black (1971)
- Entry to Elsewhen (1972)
- Time-Jump (1973)
- From This Day Forward (1973)
- The Book of John Brunner (1976)
- Tomorrow May Be Even Worse (1978)
- Foreign Constellations (1980)
- A New Settlement of Old Scores (1983)
- The Best of John Brunner (1988)
- Children of the Thunder / The Tides of Time / The Crucible of Time (1995)
- The Man Who Was Secrett and Other Stories (2013)
Chapbooks In Publication Order
- A Case of Painter’s Ear (1991)
Mammoth Book of Best New Horror Anthology Books In Publication Order
- Best New Horror 2 (1991)
- Best New Horror 3 (1992)
- Best New Horror 4 (1993)
- Best New Horror 5 (1994)
- Best New Horror 6 (1995)
- Best New Horror #26 (2015)
Snow White, Blood Red Anthology Books In Publication Order
- Snow White, Blood Red (1993)
- Black Thorn, White Rose (1994)
- Ruby Slippers, Golden Tears (1995)
- Black Swan, White Raven (1997)
- Silver Birch, Blood Moon (1999)
- Black Heart, Ivory Bones (2000)
Thieves’ World Books In Publication Order
- Thieves’ World (By:Lynn Abbey,Robert Lynn Asprin) (1979)
- Tales from the Vulgar Unicorn (By:Lynn Abbey,Robert Lynn Asprin) (1980)
- Shadows of Sanctuary (With: Philip José Farmer,Joe Haldeman,Robert Lynn Asprin) (1981)
- Storm Season (By:Lynn Abbey,Robert Lynn Asprin) (1982)
- The Face of Chaos (By:Lynn Abbey,Robert Lynn Asprin) (1983)
- Wings of Omen (By:Lynn Abbey,Robert Lynn Asprin) (1984)
- The Dead of Winter (By:Robert Lynn Asprin) (1985)
- Lythande (By:Marion Zimmer Bradley) (1985)
- Soul of the City (By:Lynn Abbey,Robert Lynn Asprin) (1986)
- Blood Ties (By:Lynn Abbey,Robert Lynn Asprin) (1986)
- Aftermath (By:Lynn Abbey,Robert Lynn Asprin) (1987)
- Uneasy Alliances (By:Robert Lynn Asprin) (1988)
- Stealers’ Sky (By:Lynn Abbey,Robert Lynn Asprin) (1989)
- Sanctuary (By:Lynn Abbey) (2002)
- Turning Points (By:Lynn Abbey) (2002)
- Enemies of Fortune (By:Lynn Abbey) (2004)
Anthologies In Publication Order
- The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, August 1966 (1966)
- Dangerous Visions (1967)
- Wondermakers 2 (1974)
- The Best of British SF 1 (1977)
- Shadows of Sanctuary (1981)
- Tales From the Forbidden Planet (1987)
- The Year’s Best Fantasy: First Annual Collection (1988)
- Demons & Dreams: The Best Fantasy and Horror 1 (1988)
- Dark Fantasies (1989)
- Beyond the Gate of Worlds (1991)
- After the King (1991)
- Best New Horror 4 (1993)
- Dark Voices 6: The Pan Book of Horror (1994)
- Strange Pleasures 2 (2003)
Empire Book Covers
Max Curfew Book Covers
Standalone Novels Book Covers
Short Stories/Novellas Book Covers
Short Story Collections Book Covers
ChapBook Covers
Mammoth Book of Best New Horror Anthology Book Covers
Snow White, Blood Red Anthology Book Covers
Thieves’ World Book Covers
Anthologies Book Covers
John Brunner Books Overview
Castaway’s World / Polymath
Colonising a new planet requires much more than just settling on a newly discovered island of Old Earth. New planets were different in thousands of ways, different from Earth and from each other. Any of those differences could mean death and disaster to a human settlement. When a ship filled with refugees from a cosmic catastrophe crash landed on such an unmapped world, their outlook was precarious. Their ship was lost, salvage had been minor, and everything came to depend on one bright young man accidentally among them. He was a trainee planet builder. It would have been his job to foresee all the problems necessary to set up a safe home for humanity. But the problem was that he was a mere student and he had been studying the wrong planet. First published 1974
Secret Agent of Terra / The Avengers of Carrig
Once the city of Carrig stood supreme on this planet that had seen settled by space refugees in the distant, forgotten past. From every corner of this primitive lost world caravans came to trade and to view the great King Hunt, the gruesome test by which the people of Carrig choose their rulers. Then from space came new arrivals. And with them came their invincible death guns and their ruthless, all powerful tyranny. Now there would be no King Hunt in Carrig, or hope for the planet unless a fool hardy high born names Saikmar, and a beautiful Earthling space spy named Maddalena, could do the impossible…
The Day of the Star Cities / Age of Miracles
This is the second American paperback edition, with cover art by Tom Kidd. It follows the Ace version published in 1973. The novel is a rewrite of ‘Day of the Star Cities’ Ace, 1965.
The Squares of the City
Science Fiction. Built in the heart of the jungle, The City was an architect’s masterpiece and the scene of a flesh and blood game of chess where the unwitting pawns were real people! 319 pages.
Stand on Zanzibar
Norman Niblock House is a rising executive at General Technics, one of a few all powerful corporations. His work is leading General Technics to the forefront of global domination, both in the marketplace and politically it’s about to take over a country in Africa. Donald Hogan is his roommate, a seemingly sheepish bookworm. But Hogan is a spy, and he’s about to discover a breakthrough in genetic engineering that will change the world…
and kill him. These two men’s lives weave through one of science fiction’s most praised novels. Written in a way that echoes John Dos Passos’ U.S.A. Trilogy, Stand on Zanzibar is a cross section of a world overpopulated by the billions. Where society is squeezed into hive living madness by god like mega computers, mass marketed psychedelic drugs, and mundane uses of genetic engineering. Though written in 1968, it speaks of 2010, and is frighteningly prescient and intensely powerful.
The Jagged Orbit
Matthew Flamen, the last of the networks’ spoolpigeons, is desperate for a big story. He needs it to keep his audience and his job. And there is no shortage of possibilities: the Gottschalk cartel is fomenting trouble among the knees in order to sell their latest armaments to the blanks; which ties in nicely with the fact that something big is brewing with the X Patriots; and it looks as if the inconceivable is about to happen and that one of Britain’s most dangerous revolutionaries is going to be given a visa to enter America. And then there’s the story that just falls into his lap. The one that suggests that the respected Director of the New York State Mental Hospital is a charlatan…
John Brunner’s brilliant and scathing vision of a society disintegrating under the impact of violence, drugs, high level corruption and the casual institutionalization of the ‘insane’ was a powerful and important statement in 1969. It remains a compelling and chilling tour de force three decades on.
The Sheep Look Up
An enduring classic, this book offers a dramatic and prophetic look at the potential consequences of the escalating destruction of Earth. In this nightmare society, air pollution is so bad that gas masks are commonplace. Infant mortality is up, and everyone seems to suffer from some form of ailment. The water is polluted, and only the poor drink from the tap. The government is ineffectual, and corporate interests scramble to make a profit from water purifiers, gas masks, and organic foods. Environmentalist Austin Train is on the run. The Trainites, environmental activists and sometime terrorists, want him to lead their movement. The government wants him in jail, or preferably, executed. The media wants a circus. Everyone has a plan for Train, but Train has a plan of his own. This suspenseful science fiction drama is now available to a new generation of enthusiasts. This replaces 0345347862.
The Shockwave Rider
A Science Fiction Book Club Selection’When John Brunner first told me of his intention to write this book, I was fascinated but I wondered whether he, or anyone, could bring it off. Bring it off he has with cool brilliance. A hero with transient personalities, animals with souls, think tanks and survival communities fuse to form a future so plausibly alive it has twitched at me ever since.’ Alvin TofflerAuthor of Future ShockHe Was The Most Dangerous Fugitive Alive, But He Didn’t Exist!Nickie Haflinger had lived a score of lifetimes…
but technically he didn’t exist. He was a fugitive from Tarnover, the high powered government think tank that had educated him. First he had broken his identity code then he escaped. Now he had to find a way to restore sanity and personal freedom to the computerized mas*ses and to save a world tottering on the brink of disaster. He didn’t care how he did it…
but the government did. That’s when his Tarnover teachers got him back in their labs…
and Nickie Haflinger was set up for a whole new education!
The Crucible of Time
This book was digitized and reprinted from the collections of the University of California Libraries. Together, the more than one hundred UC Libraries comprise the largest university research library in the world, with over thirty five million volumes in their holdings. This book and hundreds of thousands of others can be found online in the HathiTrust Digital Library. HP’s patented BookPrep technology was used to clean artifacts resulting from use and digitization, improving your reading experience.
A Maze of Stars
The ship’s millenia long mission was to preserve humanity. But humanity was becoming more alien, and the ship impossibly more human…
Muddle Earth
Rinpoche Gibbs wakes up in the twenty fourth century and finds a world populated by weird characters, such as Pope Joan II, Sherlock Holmes and his Biker Street Irregulars, and others. By the author of A Maze of Stars.
The Traveller in Black
This is a collection of stories of The Traveller in Black. It is set in a world where chaos rules. One man the man with many names, but one nature is charged with creating order out of the warring forces of nature.
Tomorrow May Be Even Worse
This softbound volume is a collection of humorous quatrains by John Brunner, each with a cartoon by Arthur Thomson ATom.
A New Settlement of Old Scores
This songbook contains twenty songs by Brunner with original lyrics and some original music. Music is provided for all songs. Each song is illustrated by a different sf or fantasy artist. Available in perfect or GBC comb binding.
Best New Horror 4
A collection of short horror stories features the work of Peter Atkins, Clive Barker, Ramsey Campbell, Kim Newman, Peter Straub, Karl Edward Wagner, and others.
Best New Horror #26
The first annual collection of the world’s best horror stories and short novels showcases fiction from every part of the field from terror to supernatural chills and features the talents of Ian Watson, Stephen Gallagher, Ramsey Campbell, and others.
Snow White, Blood Red
Once upon a time, fairy tales were for children…
But no longer. You hold in your hands a volume of wonders magical tales of trolls and ogres, of bewitched princesses and kingdoms accursed, penned by some of the most acclaimed fantasists of our day. But these are not bedtime stories designed to usher an innocent child gently into a realm of dreams. These are stories that bite lush and erotic, often dark and disturbing mystical journeys through a phantasmagoric landscape of distinctly adult sensibilities…
where there is no such thing as ‘happily ever after.’
Black Thorn, White Rose
Once Upon A Time…
A seduced prince willingly fell prey to a sensuous usurper’s erotic treacheries…
a flesh eating ogre gamboled in the footlights…
a gingerbread man fled in terror from the baking pan to the fire…
The award winning editors of Snow White, Blood Red return us to distinctly adult realms of myth and the fantastic with eighteen wondorous works that cloak the magical fictions we heard at Grandma’s knee in mantles of darkness and dread. From Roger Zelansky’s delightful tale of Death’s disobedient godson to Peter Straub’s blood chilling examination of a gargantuan Cinderella and her terrible twisted ‘art,’ here are stories strange and miraculous remarkable modern storytelling that remold our most cherished childhood fables into things sexier, more sinister…
and more appealing to grown up tastes and sensiblilities.
Ruby Slippers, Golden Tears
‘Once upon a time…
‘ So begin the classic fairy tales that enthralled and terrified us as children. Now, in their third critically acclaimed collection of original fairy tales for adults, World Fantasy Award winning editors Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling bring us twenty one new stories by some of the top names in literature today. Joyce Carol Oates, Gahan Wilson, Gene Wolfe, Tanith Lee, Neil Gaiman these are but a few of the accomplished literary sorcerers who have gathered here to remold our timeless myths into more sensuous and disturbing forms. Like the fabled ruby slippers, there is powerful magic here. Rich witches in trendy resorts cast evil spells…
beautiful princesses age and wither in sleeping worlds…
terrible beasts reside beneath flawless skin. Dark, disturbing, delightful, each story was written expressly for this superb collection of distinctly grown up fantasy a brilliant companion volume to Datlow and Windling’s acclaimed anthologies, Snow White, Blood Red and Black Thorn, White Rose.
Black Swan, White Raven
A stellar assymbly of many of today’s most creative and accomplished storytellers has gathered around the tribal fire to embroider well worn yarns with new golden thread. Black Swan, White Raven revisits the tales that charmed, enthralled, and terrified us in our early youth carrying us aloft into the healthy, beating heart of cherished myth to tell once again the stories of Rumpelstiltskins and sleeping beauties, only this time from an edgy, provocative and distinctly adult perspective. The themes and archetypes of our beloved childhood fiction are reexamined in a darker light by 21 superb teller of tales who deftly uncover the ironic, the outrageous, the enigmatic and the erotic at the core of the world’s best known fables, while revealing the sobering truths and lies behind ‘happily ever after.’
Silver Birch, Blood Moon
The four previous volumes in Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling’s anthology series of fairly tales retold with a distinctively modern edge have been hailded by reviewers as ‘brilliant,’ ‘provocative,’ and ‘disturbing.’ In this triumphant new collection of original fiction, twenty one of today’s leading writers spin the cherished fables of childhood into glittering gold offering magical tales for adults, as seductive as they are sophisticated.A jealous prince plots the destruction of his hated brother’s wedding by inventing a ‘magic’ suit of clothing visible only to the pure at heart…
A young girl’s strange fairy tale obsession results in a brutal murder…
An embittered mother cares for her dying son who is trapped in a thicket that guards a sleeping beauty…
In a bleak and desolate industrial wasteland, a group of violent outcasts lays the tattered myths of one Millenium to rest, and gives terrifying birth to those of the next. Erotic, compelling, witty, and altogether extraordinary, these stories lay bare our innermost demons and desires imaginatively transforming our youthful fantasies into things darker, slyer, and more delightfully subversive.
Black Heart, Ivory Bones
Hair bright as gold…
Lips red as blood…
Heart black as sin…
Truth sharp as bone…
As in their previous critically acclaimed volumes of reconsidered fairy tales, award winning editors Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling have gathered together remarkable stories that illuminate the more sinister, sensual, and sophisticated aspects of the tales we cherished in childhood; the fables of witches and princes and lost children that we once imagined we knew.’ Black Heart, Ivory Bones‘ showcases twenty beguiling tales for the child that was and the adult that is, penned by twenty of the most creative artists in contemporary American literature. Here dissected are the darker anatomies of the timeless, seemingly simple stories we have long loved. Here wonder and truth have serious bite.’ A lovelorn prince seeking his father’s blessing concocts a fantastic tale of a witch, a tower, and lustrous long hair…
A pair of accursed red boots punishes a beautiful dancer for her pride…
A troll killing, princess rescuing warrior is compelled to consider events from his adversaries’ point of view…
In a blistering tell all memoir, Goldilocks reveals the sordid truth about her brutal foster parent, Papa Bear…
‘Rich, surprising, funny, erotic, and unsettling, these twenty new yarns and poems offer exceptional anew treasures as they brilliantly reveal lusts and jealousies, foibles, hatreds and dangerous obsessions, the things that slyly lurk in the midnight interior of oft told tales. As in their previous critically acclaimed volumes of reconsidered fairy tales, award winning editors Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling have gathered together remarkable stories that illuminate the more sinister, sensual,and sophisticated aspects of the tales we cherished in childhood; the fables of witches and princes and lost children that we once imagined we knew. Black Heart, Ivory Bones showcases twenty beguiling tales for the child that was and the adult that is, penned by twenty of the most creative artists in contemporary American literature. Here dissected are the darker anatomies of the timeless, seemingly simple stories we have long loved. Here wonder and truth have serious bite.’A lovelorn prince seeking his father’s blessing concocts a fantastic tale of a witch, a tower, and lustrous long hair…
A pair of accursed red boots punishes a beautiful dancer for her pride…
A troll killing, princess rescuing warrior is compelled to consider events from his adversaries’ point of view…
In a blistering tell all memoir, Goldilocks reveals the sordid truth about her brutal foster parent, Papa Bear…
Rich, surprising, funny, erotic, and unsettling, these twenty new yarns and poems offer exceptional new treasures as they brilliantly reveal lusts and jealousies, foibles, hatreds, and dangerous obsessions, the things that slyly lurk in the midnight interior of oft told tales. As in their previous critically acclaimed volumes of reconsidered fairy tales, award winning editors Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling have gathered together remarkable stories that illuminate the more sinister, sensual, and sophisticated aspects of the tales we cherished in childhood; the fables of witches and princes and lost children that we once imagined we knew. Black Heart, Ivory Bones showcases twenty beguiling tales for the child that was and the adult that is, penned by twenty of the most creative artists incontemporary American literature. Here dissected are the darker anatomies of the timeless, seemingly simple stories we have long loved. Here wonder and truth have serious bite.’A lovelorn prince seeking his father’s blessing concocts a fantastic tale of a witch, a tower, and lustrous long hair…
A pair of accursed red boots punishes a beautiful dancer for her pride…
A troll killing, princess rescuing warrior is compelled to consider events from his adversaries’ point of view…
In a blistering tell all memoir, Goldilocks reveals the sordid truth about her brutal foster parent, Papa Bear…
Rich, surprising, funny, erotic, and unsettling, these twenty new yarns and poems offer exceptional new treasures as they brilliantly reveal lusts and jealousies, foibles, hatreds, and dangerous obsessions, the things that slyly lurk in the midnight interior of oft told tales.
Tales from the Vulgar Unicorn (By:Lynn Abbey,Robert Lynn Asprin)
Fantasy Anthology sequel to Thieve’s World. Includes: Maps of Sanctuary; Introduction; and: 1. Spiders of the Purple Mage by Philip Jose Farmer; 2. Goddess by David Drake; 3. The Fruit of Enlibar by Lynn Abbey; 4. The Dream of the Sorceress by A. E. van Vogt; 5. Vashanka’s Minion by Janet Morris; 6. Shadow’s Pawn by Andrew J. Offutt; 7. To Guard the Guardians by Robert Lynn Asprin; and Essay: The Lighter Side of Sanctuary. 299 pages.
Sanctuary (By:Lynn Abbey)
From the Bestselling Fantasy Adventure Series, Thieves’ World tmCreated by Robert Lynn Asprin & Lynn AbbeyReturn To The City That Would Not Die!Return To Thieves’ World!Return To Sanctuary!Thieves’ World was the bestselling and first of the shared world phenomenon, selling well over a million copies of anthologies detailing the exploits and intrigues of the high born and low born denizens of Sanctuary, a city that has seen many masters. The Age of Ranke and the reign of Kadakithis, the occupation of the Beysib, the war of the gods and indeed the erstwhile Renaissance are now all in the past. Memories of heroes and villains, glory and savagery have all been relegated to the shadows of yesteryear as present day residents once again apply themselves to the task at hand: survival. Only Molin Torchholder, architect of Sanctuary’s glory and master of her secrets. knows the whole truth, but he is dying…
He must hold on until he can pass along the city’s hidden history of empires come and gone and blood shed for reason and naught. Aiding him are a lowly laborer named Cauvin, himself a survivor of one of the city’s darkest moments, and a young boy named Bec. So many secrets and so little time. And as Molin s chronicles of the past unfold, even darker forces return, an evil that jeopardizes the very survival of a city that until now has always refused to die. Sanctuary An Epic Novel of Thieves’ World ushers in a whole new age of tales, a whole new age of Thieves’ World.
Turning Points (By:Lynn Abbey)
This is the first of a new series of shared world anthologies that continues Sanctuarys story with tales of necromancers and assassins, urchins and knaves, and of course the thieves who lurk in its alleys and shadows. This volume will include new stories by Raymond E. Feist, Dennis L. McKiernan, Mickey Zucker Reichert, Diana Paxson, Lynn Abbey and others. Sanctuary, a lawless city governed by evil forces, powerful magic, and political intrigue, where survival is an unexpected bonus. The Age of the Rankan reign of Kadakithis, the occupation of the Beysib, and even the erstwhile Renaissance are all in the past. It is years later and the heroes of the pastJubal, Tempus, Shadowspawn, and the Stormchildrenare memories, myth, and rumor. Now outsiders rule with an iron hand and a bloody dagger. Molin Torchholder, the secret guardian of the city, is dead, his mantle and staff secretly passed to another. But Sanctuary and its inhabitants carry on. The city has reached a turning point…
and only the fates know where it will lead.
Enemies of Fortune (By:Lynn Abbey)
Empires rise and fall, but Sanctuary lives on. Sanctuary, a lawless city governed by evil forces, powerful magic, and political intrigue where survival is an unexpected bonus.A recent storm has left a ship filled with exotic cargo and arcane secrets wrecked off the shore of Sanctuary in this second of a new series of shared world anthologies. Thieves’ World: Enemies of Fortune continues the story with tales of necromancers and assassins, urchins and knaves, and of course, thieves. This unexpected booty leads to boons and curses for the world weary residents as well as the usual power struggle among factions wishing to take deadly advantage at any new turn of events. All new stories by Lynn Abbey, Stephen Brust, C.J. Cherryh, Jeff Grubb, Mickey Zucker Reichert, Dennis McKiernan, Andrew Offutt, Robin Wayne Bailey, Diana Paxson, Jody Lynn Nye, Selina Rosen, and Jane Fancher.
Dangerous Visions
Anthologies seldom make history, but Dangerous Visions is a grand exception. Harlan Ellison’s 1967 collection of science fiction stories set an almost impossibly high standard, as more than a half dozen of its stories won major awards not surpising with a contributors list that reads like a who’s who of 20th century SF: Samuel D. Delany, Philip K. Dick, Brian Aldiss, Roger Zelazny, Philip Jose Farmer, Fritz Leiber, Larry Niven and Robert Silverberg. Unavailable for 15 years, this huge anthology now returns to print, as relevant now as when it was first published.
After the King
After the King presents an outstanding collection of new fantasy stories by an extraordinary assemblage of some of the very best writers to ever continue the tradition Tolkien began with The Lord of the Rings. Stephen R. Donaldson, Peter S. Beagle, Andrew Nortong, Terry Pratchett, Robert Silverberg, Judith Tarr, Gregory Benford, Jane Yolen, Poul and Karen Anderson, Mike Resnick, Emma Bull, Elizabeth Ann Scarborough, John Brunner, Harrr Turtledove, Dennis L. McKiernan, Karen Haber, Barry M. Malzberg, and Charles de Lint contribute to a dazzling anthology that captures the spirit and originality of Tolkien’s great work. The millions whose lives have been touched by J.R.R. Tolkien will find the same primal storytelling magic here, undiluted an running ever on.
Strange Pleasures 2
Edited by award winning editors John Grant and Dave Hutchinson, Strange Pleasures 2 takes you into the worlds of: N. Lee Wood, Nick Mamatas, David V. Barrett, Keith Brooke, Lou Anders Fay Sampson, Sarah Singleton, Jean Marie Ward, Paul Kincaid, Ian Johnson, John Brunner, and Vera Nazarian.
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