The Forgotten Planet

The Forgotten Planet is a science fiction novel by American writer Murray Leinster. It was released in 1954 by Gnome Press in an edition of 5,000 copies. The novel is a fix-up from three short stories, "The Mad Planet" and "The Red Dust", both of which had originally appeared in the magazine Argosy in 1920 and 1921, and "Nightmare Planet", which had been published in Science Fiction Plus in 1953.

The Forgotten Planet
Dust-jacket from the first edition
AuthorMurray Leinster
Cover artistEd Emshwiller
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherGnome Press
Publication date
1954
Media typePrint (hardback)
Pages177
OCLC1813386

Plot introduction

A planet had been seeded for life by humans, first with microbes and later with plants and insects. A third expedition, intended to complete the seeding with animals, never occurred. (This represents a retcon introduced in "Nightmare Planet.") Over the millennia the insects and plants grew to gigantic sizes. The action of the novel describes the fight for survival by descendants of a crashed spaceship as they battle wolf-sized ants, flies the size of chickens, and gigantic flying wasps.

Reception

Groff Conklin of Galaxy Science Fiction praised the novel as "Leinster at his exciting, skilled best," declaring "there is almost nothing in the story that is not first-rate."[1] The magazine's Floyd C. Gale called it "quite a reading experience".[2] P. Schuyler Miller similarly reported "the old master is at his best in this one."[3] Anthony Boucher, however, found it to be "an interminable sequence of wars against giant insects, which seems pretty outmoded today."[4]

gollark: I am not an idiot. You, however, are an idiot.
gollark: I mean, cars are very scary, several-ton metal boxes hurtling down roads at several tens of metres per second.
gollark: I am still an ageless entity from beyond space and time, Ly¶icly.
gollark: I don't actually have a driving license because of never actually learning to drive cars at all.
gollark: It isn't proof. I could obviously be lying to you.

References

  1. "Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf", Galaxy Science Fiction, January 1955, p.120
  2. Gale, Floyd C. (April 1963). "Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf". Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 155–159.
  3. "The Reference Library", Astounding Science Fiction, May 1955, p.144
  4. "Recommended Reading," F&SF, February 1955, pp.96-97.

Sources


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