About this Item
[Magazines and Periodicals][Literature][Sci-fi] Analog Science Fiction and Fact archive of five issues. New York: Condé Nast Publications, 1962-1967. Five issues, each with original color-illustrated wrappers. A representative archive from the mid-1960s run of Analog, the leading hard science fiction magazine edited by John W. Campbell, Jr. These issues showcase the genre's deep enthusiasm for technology and serialized world-building. Particularly notable within this group is the inclusion of work by Margaret L. Silbar, one of the few women writing science articles for Analog during this period, as well as recurring stories by prolific socialist futurist Mack Reynolds, a rare example of a leftist voice under Campbell's otherwise conservative-leaning editorial regime. Archive includes: [1] Analog Science Fiction and Fact, Vol. LXX, No. 1 (September 1962). Featuring the first installment of James Blish's two-part serial A Life for the Stars, which helped solidify his Cities in Flight universe as a cornerstone of American space opera. Also includes short fiction by Leonard Lockhard and Christopher Anvil, as well as Mack Reynolds's Good Indian, continuing his ongoing exploration of Cold War geopolitics through speculative futures. Article: The First Science by Joseph F. Goodavage. [2] Analog Science Fiction and Fact, Vol. LXX, No. 4 (December 1962). This issue features the novelette Blind Man's Lantern by Allen Kim Lang, one of the few named Asian American authors published in the magazine at the time. Also includes short fiction by Mack Reynolds (Subversive) and Tom Godwin, with the second installment of H. Beam Piper's serial Space Viking. Alfred Pfanstiehl contributes the science article Intelligent Noise. [3] Analog Science Fiction and Fact, Vol. LXXV, No. 5 (July 1965). Includes short fiction by Scott Nichols and Lawrence A. Perkins, along with Christopher Anvil's In the Light of Further Data. Of note is the novelette The Adventure of the Extraterrestrial by Mack Reynolds, an allegorical tale critiquing American xenophobia. Poul Anderson's serial Trader Team also appears. [4] Analog Science Fiction and Fact, Vol. LXXVI, No. 1 (September 1965). Mack Reynolds headlines with the first part of Space Pioneer, alongside Walter Bupp's novelette Psi for Sale and stories by Michael Karageorge and Ben Bova. Includes Test in Orbit, a speculative satire by Bova addressing automation and machine intelligence. Science article by Lyle R. Hamilton. [5] Analog Science Fiction and Fact, Vol. LXXVIII, No. 6 (February 1967). Of particular significance is Margaret L. Silbar's article The Quark Story, an early attempt to present cutting-edge particle physics to a general science fiction readership-rare scientific authorship by a woman in Analog. Also includes fiction by Joe Poyer, Jack Wodhams, and a concluding serial installment by Mack Reynolds (Amazon Planet). An insightful five-issue collection spanning Campbell's editorial dominance at Analog, featuring work by underrecognized voices including Margaret L. Silbar and Allen Kim Lang, and thematically reflecting the shifting political and technological anxieties of Cold War-era science fiction. An excellent collection of midcentury genre literature, women in science writing, and American techno-political imagination.
Seller Inventory # 21894
Contact seller
Report this item